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Journal Article
boundary 2 (2024) 51 (2): 1.
Published: 01 May 2024
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2002) 29 (3): 55–75.
Published: 01 August 2002
...Haroldo Dilla Alfonso Duke University Press 2002 6736 boundary 2 29:3 / sheet 59 of 265
Cuba: The Changing Scenarios of Governability
Haroldo Dilla Alfonso...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2022) 49 (1): 105–135.
Published: 01 February 2022
...Rochona Majumdar What changes in our understanding of Indian films when we treat the song sequence as a separate medium situated both within and outside the film text? I argue for treating the song text as operating simultaneously on multiple levels, both within the film and in its afterlife...
FIGURES
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Journal Article
boundary 2 (2011) 38 (1): 101–134.
Published: 01 February 2011
...Qing Liu; Barrett McCormick This paper examines how market-oriented reforms to media are changing the public sphere in contemporary China with particular concern for how the commercialization of media may impact the prospects for democracy. While the authors find “public sphere” a problematic...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2010) 37 (1): 179–200.
Published: 01 February 2010
... the return of rhetoric and poetics and argues that, far from simply reflecting changes in academic fashion, this event signals a complete reorientation of the scholarly apparatus. The argument calls attention to the material and historical alignment of scholarship with the medium of literacy and suggests...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2008) 35 (3): 223–238.
Published: 01 August 2008
... to bear on Ang Lee's intentions in making this film as well as on the differences of style and approach between Ang Lee and Eileen Chang, on whose original story the film is based. The essay pays particular attention to Ang Lee's diasporic background as a Chinese filmmaker from Taiwan with a cultural...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2014) 41 (2): 99–111.
Published: 01 May 2014
... or another, as a ubiquitous electronic background activity, change their experience of interacting with the printed word? Gumbrecht bases his observations on two seminars that he taught in Santiago de Chile in 2013, in which Stanford undergraduates were reading fiction and nonfiction texts in both English...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2011) 38 (1): 7–52.
Published: 01 February 2011
... undergone tremendous changes over the last three decades which are tracked here in broad outline, these changes have confirmed the prognostication of thirty years ago. The People's Republic of China has emerged since the 1990s as one of the cores of the global capitalist economy, and divisions in society...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2011) 38 (1): 203–229.
Published: 01 February 2011
...Yunxiang Yan This article reveals that in response to the dramatic social changes since the 1949 revolution, Chinese rural families have undergone a process of profound transformation, which I refer to as the “individualization of the family.” This transformation took place at two interlocking yet...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2017) 44 (1): 239–265.
Published: 01 February 2017
...Tom Cohen This essay places Bernard Stiegler's conception of arche -cinema in contact with the era of climate change and the impasse that it presents to the American Left today. It views Stiegler's thought as a post-anthropocene writing project yet asks whether the “proletarianization of the senses...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2022) 49 (3): 123–132.
Published: 01 August 2022
...Andrew Schelling Abstract Andrew Schelling recalls and discusses a college course, “World Poetry,” which Norman O. Brown taught at University of California, Santa Cruz, in 1974. The turbulent politics and weird, harrowing culture changes of North America set a context. Brown's class met weekly...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2008) 35 (3): 213–221.
Published: 01 August 2008
...Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht For some years now, inside observers have felt that literary studies has arrived at a moment of stagnation. Not only has a fifty-year-long sequence of changing “paradigms” come to a standstill since the final years of the twentieth century; not only are we longing for new...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2009) 36 (2): 55–66.
Published: 01 May 2009
...Jonathan Arac Chang-Rae Lee's Native Speaker (1995) demonstrates the work a novel can do in speaking (up) for the human in the current life of the United States, even though the novel as an institution has become residual, as print literature yields to other media forms. Through his epigraph from...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2009) 36 (1): 95–104.
Published: 01 February 2009
... in the 1950s. Where the former aspired to subvert established power, the latter still believed that the system might continue to be changed from within. Thus the two movements looked quite different, even as they espoused similar ideas and shared many common experiences. Both groups took the “long path through...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2009) 36 (1): 149–182.
Published: 01 February 2009
... of radical change would suggest that the sixties were not only not a “failure” but in certain respects loom ahead of us. © 2009 by Duke University Press 2009 “Long Time”:
Last Daughters and the New “New South”
Hortense J. Spillers
1...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2009) 36 (3): 97–103.
Published: 01 August 2009
... indeterminate somatic pathways, where deep listening operates a reading machine. Faced with an age of extinction, remembering Cecilia Vicuña's and Antonin Artaud's call for a poetics of volatile agency and of bodily change, let us write island preserves of animality into the subject. Poetry animals...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2010) 37 (2): 107–132.
Published: 01 May 2010
...Jeremy Matthew Glick This essay examines Amiri Baraka's improvisatory, always changing commitment to literary and performative formal innovation in the service of his radical politics. It charts the coupling of romantic longing with radical political prescription in Baraka's career and suggests...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2013) 40 (1): 155–189.
Published: 01 February 2013
...Sadia Abbas This essay argues that notions of the subject, individualism, freedom, agency, change, and history (in other words, the ideas that are used to mark the boundaries of the West, and that generate the most sensitized aporias of modernity) have come to cluster around the figure...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2012) 39 (1): 1–16.
Published: 01 February 2012
... and the emergent revolutionary elites over the meaning of the forces of social change and the modalities through which they are to be sustained or institutionalized. That contestation is fundamentally over the legitimacy of divergent, although related, intellectual formations or structures of knowledge. © 2012...
Journal Article
boundary 2 (2012) 39 (2): 33–70.
Published: 01 May 2012
..., and how to transpose the evental logics of history into a means whereby change within the territory of the United States can be linked with transnational democratic possibilities. By impersonating a transnational institution that does not exist anywhere else on this planet, Obama has as one of his...
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