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Journal Article
American Literature (2023) 95 (2): 439–443.
Published: 01 June 2023
...Christopher Grobe [email protected] Deceitful Media: Artificial Intelligence and Social Life after the Turing Test . By Simone Natale . New York : Oxford Univ. Press . 2021 . x, 191 pp. Cloth, $99.00 ; paper, $29.95 ; e-book, $19.99 . The Computer’s Voice: From “Star...
Journal Article
American Literature 11934272.
Published: 04 July 2025
... is the potentiality that Arendt will call natality in The Human Condition. As radical indetermination, natality indicates the birth of new men and the new beginning, the action they are capable of by virtue of being born (Arendt [1958] 1998: 247). Wright, too, sees a creative potential in one s separation from...
Journal Article
American Literature (2023) 95 (2): 185–204.
Published: 01 June 2023
... work both reflect and remain attuned to actually existing sociotechnical systems. 13 It follows that there would be a focus on particular corporations and devices (Crawford and Joler 2018 ; Natale 2021 ), as well as infrastructure, extractive industries, environmental costs, and labor exploitation...
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Journal Article
American Literature (2019) 91 (3): 447–457.
Published: 01 September 2019
... emancipated were “regarded as part of the slave population rather than the free” (411). Moreover, “no one of that race had ever migrated to the United States voluntarily; all of them had been brought here as articles of merchandise” (411). In thus canonizing the natal alienation of US slavery, Taney reserves...
Journal Article
American Literature (2007) 79 (1): 1–27.
Published: 01 March 2007
... a spiritual land) as its concomitant; it has an essential relation to a Natal, a Native.”36 In calling out “O! America” in his journal, Cathcart summons the “spiritual land” that is “concomitant” to his refrain. The exile expresses his desire to return to the nurturing mother of his natal condition...
Journal Article
American Literature (2019) 91 (3): 619–647.
Published: 01 September 2019
...) of black people, the essential condition of slavery characterized by a loss of individuality, most notably in the form of “natal alienation” (7), in which the enslaved individual is “alienated from all ‘rights’ or claims of birth” (5) and excluded from belonging “to any legitimate social order” (5). While...
Journal Article
American Literature (2011) 83 (3): 547–570.
Published: 01 September 2011
... of natal tropes that find fruition in Khalid’s rebirth, midwifed by the vicissitudes of his own immigra- tion. This climactic event is preceded by a series of thwarted adven- tures over the course of which Khalid grows increasingly expectant. Battery Park is a seminal site of this expectancy. Unlike...
Journal Article
American Literature (2024) 96 (4): 643–670.
Published: 01 December 2024
..., “the register of black experience that is not reducible to the terror that calls it into existence, but is the rich remainder.” Quashie poses this assertion in dialogue with the work of Terrion L. Williamson ( 2016 : 9). 14 On social death , the original condition of deracination from natal ties...
Journal Article
American Literature (2007) 79 (2): 335–361.
Published: 01 June 2007
...), 23. 11 Michael Rogin, “Francis Galton and Mark Twain: The Natal Autograph in Pudd’nhead Wilson,” in Mark Twain, “Pudd’nhead Wilson”: Race, Conflict, and Culture, ed. Susan Gillman and Forrest G. Robinson (Durham, N.C.: Duke Univ. Press, 1990), 76. 12 See Pauline E. Hopkins...
Journal Article
American Literature (2007) 79 (2): 243–273.
Published: 01 June 2007
... as a native spot that is no longer native and a scene of violence that is no longer violent, productively so for Hawthorne’s authorship. His once-removed relation to this violent natality prefigures Hester’s removal from her native spot in England while it also narrates such removals...
Journal Article
American Literature (2013) 85 (3): 475–504.
Published: 01 September 2013
... observed, “slaves were neither aliens nor citizens”;1 they had neither foreign allegiance nor comprehensive domestic pro- tections. Slavery, as a condition of “natal alienation” (to use Orlando Patterson’s [1982, 5] term), instituted a formal separation between resi- dence and political membership...
Journal Article
American Literature (2014) 86 (2): 245–274.
Published: 01 June 2014
... individuals came to the fore of the US national imagi- nary. At this time, institutions were built that separated disabled indi- viduals from their natal communities and allowed for stereotypes of these emergent groups to develop. The Deaf offer an illuminating example: the Connecticut Asylum...
Journal Article
American Literature (2000) 72 (2): 321–355.
Published: 01 June 2000
... Man, suggested that Ellison derived his material nearly unfiltered from the figure of the African American trickster, Ellison pushed him back, asserting a writerly genealogy uninfluenced by natal heritage: I use folklore...