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paul bali deposited literature & rev notes for PHL923 in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years agoincluding readings of Joseph McElroy, Tolkien, Norman Rush, Sartre, and others
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paul bali deposited an animal exits an index, extended in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years agoa poetic condensing of the larger work
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paul bali deposited we’re bad history in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years agoon apocalypse, shakespeare, Clarke’s Third Law, the corporate take-over of Star Wars and else
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paul bali deposited plantinga radio in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years agoa four-year journal / longpoem, @ Twitter
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paul bali deposited phoebe phoebe in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years agoa longpoem
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Caitlin Duffy started the topic CFP: Literature as Activism, Stony Brook University English Graduate Conference in the discussion
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month ago<p style=”text-align: center;”>Stony Brook University </p>
<p style=”text-align: center;”>30th Annual English Graduate Conference</p>
<p style=”text-align: center;”>February 23rd, 2018</p>
<p style=”text-align: center;”>
Literature as ActivismKeynote Speaker: Dr. Lisa Duggan, NYU</p>
Literature is a social act. Our encounters with l…[Read more] -
Victoria Addis deposited The Greening of Postmodern Discourse in Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake and Graham Swift’s Waterland in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 2 months agoIn this article, I argue that the groundlessness associated with postmodernism is not as entrenched within its discourse as it may appear. Graham Swift’s Waterland (1992) and Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake (2003), while conforming to many of the aesthetic values of postmodernism, share an ecopostmodernist platform that raises questions and con…[Read more]
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Caren Irr deposited Toward the World Novel: Genre Shifts in Twenty-First-Century Expatriate Fiction in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 2 months agoPresents an analysis of the emergence of new genres of international–especially expatriate–fiction in 21st-century US letters.
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Behnam Mirzababazadeh Fomeshi deposited چرایی اقبال امرسن به حافظ: نگاهی تاریخی در بررسی یک ارتباط ادبی (Reasons behind Emerson’s Reception of Hafez: A Historical Look at a Literary Relationship) in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 2 months agoدر پژوهش¬های متعدد، ارتباط میان حافظ و امرسن بررسی و در این زمینه، بیشتر بر تأثیر حافظ بر امرسن و گاه شباهت میان آندو یا شیفتگی امرسن به حافظ تأکید شده است؛ اما جنبه¬های تاریخی این ارتباط و چرایی آن بررسی نشده است. توجه به آمریکای قرن نوزدهم، جنبش¬ها و گفتمان¬های سیاسی، اجتماعی و فرهنگی این کشور، پژوهش حاضر را به نتایجی روشنگر رهنمون می¬شود.…[Read more]
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Andrew Newman deposited Indigeneity and Early American Literature in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoFour conceptualizations of the relationship between indigeneity and early American literature provide a basis for this history and its historiography. Three of these pertain to cultural works produced at least in part by Native Americans: these are (1) written representations of Native American spoken performances, or “oral literature”; (2) wri…[Read more]
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Andrew Newman deposited Indigeneity and Early American Literature in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoFour conceptualizations of the relationship between indigeneity and early American literature provide a basis for this history and its historiography. Three of these pertain to cultural works produced at least in part by Native Americans: these are (1) written representations of Native American spoken performances, or “oral literature”; (2) wri…[Read more]
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Andrew Newman deposited “Light might possibly be requisite”: Edgar Huntly, Regional History, and Historicist Criticism in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoCharles Brockden Brown’s celebrated novel Edgar Huntly; or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker (1799), set in the Forks of the Delaware region of Pennsylvania, has been related to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia on the basis of a mistaken understanding that its action takes place during the summer of 1787. The correct date is 1785. The n…[Read more]
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Andrew Newman deposited “Light might possibly be requisite”: Edgar Huntly, Regional History, and Historicist Criticism in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoCharles Brockden Brown’s celebrated novel Edgar Huntly; or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker (1799), set in the Forks of the Delaware region of Pennsylvania, has been related to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia on the basis of a mistaken understanding that its action takes place during the summer of 1787. The correct date is 1785. The n…[Read more]
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Christoph Imscher deposited “Listening to Eliot’s Thrush” in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoThe essay takes a fresh look at Eliot’s ‘water-dripping song’ in The Waste Land. It seems impossible for the ornithologically minded Eliot not to have known that the hermit thrush’s song does not sound like dripping water. In fact, nowhere in ornithological writing — and certainly not in his source, Chapman’s Handbook of North American Birds —…[Read more]
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Joydeep Chakraborty deposited Spectral Consciousness in Post-9/11 American Poetry (Revised Form) in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoAfter presenting an overview of scholarship on post-9/11 American poetry, my article focuses on a group of largely neglected post-9/11 poems, which deal with spectral consciousness and hallucinatory experiences. In exploring this issue, I have tried to establish a relationship between trauma-related intrusive memories and hallucination on the…[Read more]
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Sherry Truffin deposited Joyce Carol Oates Revisits the Schoolhouse Gothic in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoThe “Schoolhouse Gothic” represents teachers, students, and academic institutions using Gothic tropes such as the monster, the curse, and the trap. Joyce Carol Oates’s 2013 novel The Accursed both exemplifies and deviates from this tradition. Like other Schoolhouse Gothic works, The Accursed portrays the university as a place of mystified power…[Read more]
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Sherry Truffin deposited Creation Anxiety in Gothic Metafiction: The Dark Half and Lunar Park in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoThe Gothic metafiction of Stephen King and Bret Easton Ellis focuses on author-protagonists who fear what they create because their creations are re-creations, projections of their creator’s anxieties, some conventionally Gothic (the multiple/split self) and others specific to postmodern conceptions of subjectivity in general and authorship in p…[Read more]
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Sherry Truffin deposited ‘Gigantic Paradox, Too … Monstrous for Solution’: Nightmarish Democracy and the Schoolhouse Gothic in “William Wilson” and The Secret History in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoTo review the history of the Gothic as a counter-Enlightenment discourse, albeit an ambivalent one, is to see the suitability, if not the inevitability, of the Gothic treatment of education and educators. Presumably benign institutions, schools may seem more like unfeeling bureaucracies, brainwashing factories, militaristic zones, or lawless waste…[Read more]
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Sherry Truffin deposited Zombies in the Classroom: Education as Consumption in Two Novels by Joyce Carol Oates in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoTo review the history of the Gothic as a counter-Enlightenment discourse is to see the suitability, if not the inevitability, of the Gothic treatment of education and educators. Schools and schoolteachers are keepers and transmitters of enlightenment. At the same time, schools and teachers are figures of power. They decide when children work, when…[Read more]
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Sherry Truffin deposited ‘This is what passes for free will’: Chuck Palahniuk’s Postmodern Gothic in the group
American Literature on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months agoLiterary Gothic emerged in the eighteenth century, the so-called Age of Reason, and takes as its subject the enemies of reason: superstition, madness, barbarism, taboo, etc. In the Gothic, these adversaries are engaged and often defeated. At the same time, however, the Gothic is a claustrophobic, paranoid literature, both profoundly skeptical of…[Read more]
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