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Journal Article
Genre (2011) 44 (2): 157–180.
Published: 01 June 2011
... into French philosophy in the 1970s. Emphasizing the influence of Jackson's writing on the Deleuzian concept of a “line of flight,” this article aims to extend recent historical accounts of the circulation and translation of Soledad Brother in the 1970s (enabled by Jean Genet and the Prison Information Group...
Journal Article
Genre (2007) 40 (1-2): 187–190.
Published: 01 March 2007
Journal Article
Genre (2010) 43 (1-2): 199–205.
Published: 01 March 2010
... sentimentalization of love. Crucially, against such corrupt and sentimentalized love, Hardt and Negri understand love along the lines of Spinoza’s conception of joy as a constituent force. For Spi- noza, what is joyous is what enlarges the body’s capacities for action. Similarly, Hardt and Negri emphasize...
Journal Article
Genre (2020) 53 (1): 1–25.
Published: 01 April 2020
... that line of inquiry through an analysis of the representation of vision and its limitations in James Joyce’s Ulysses , arguing that the textual construction of ability arises through the myth of the diaphanous abled body—or the assumption that nondisabled experience occurs absent bodily interference...
Journal Article
Genre (2021) 54 (1): 89–109.
Published: 01 April 2021
...Marjorie Worthington Ruth Ozeki's novel A Tale for the Time Being is an autofiction—a novel whose protagonist is a characterized version of its author and thereby straddles the line between memoir and fiction. In an American literary context, autofiction is a genre dominated by white male authors...
Journal Article
Genre (2012) 45 (1): 1–7.
Published: 01 March 2012
... and convention). Our introduction focuses on the multiple lines of interconnection between the essays and the character of the story they tell together. Taken as a whole, the story about the fate of lyric poetry at the turn of the twentieth century is rich in the elements of romance: danger, conflict, rescue...
Journal Article
Genre (2012) 45 (1): 29–55.
Published: 01 March 2012
... structure also associated with children’s games and nursery rhymes. This style of verse seems simple, even primitive, because any number of syllables can be used in a line as long as a basic structure of beats is clear. The emphasis on these primary beats also takes on a greater importance than...
Journal Article
Genre (2011) 44 (3): 277–291.
Published: 01 September 2011
..., where to break the line or stanza so that a new layer of meaning may emerge. Crafting a poem can, itself, be a retreat from anxi- ety or boredom or even physical pain. John Fox’s Poetic Medicine (1997), a beautiful account of doing poetry work- shops with patients, testifies to the very...
Journal Article
Genre (2014) 47 (3): 357–377.
Published: 01 December 2014
... : inverse tempting us to draw a line between the n and the v, so that we read this at one and the same time as both a plot in verse and the inverse of plot. The capitalization of “PLOT” and the open spacing coupled with the floating visual of the colon (two tiny orbs in proximity to each other...
Journal Article
Genre (2004) 37 (3-4): 551–552.
Published: 01 September 2004
...- lished versions of their essays. Listed below are all the corrections that have been brought to our attention to date. Errata in John Pitcher, "Chaucer's Wolf: Exemplary Violence in The Physician's Tale" p.l: line 3 should read " The Physician's Tale" p.l: last line should read...
Journal Article
Genre (2000) 33 (3-4): 331–338.
Published: 01 September 2000
... an imaginary line directly from you to the rising sun visible on the horizon. Now suppose you remain there until noon and then draw a line from you to the sun high overhead. From your point of view, these two lines are orthogonal to one another and meet only at you. If I were to tell you that in fact...
Journal Article
Genre (2012) 45 (1): 121–142.
Published: 01 March 2012
... the churchyard, intersected with dykes and mounds and gates, with scattered cattle feeding on it, was the marshes; and that the low leaden line beyond, was the river; and that the distant savage lair from which the wind was rushing, was the sea; and that the small bundle of shivers...
Journal Article
Genre (2006) 39 (4): 105–124.
Published: 01 December 2006
... of those occasions when the men of letters happened to want to write vernacular verses for entertainment. How then to better understand the extraordinary popularity of the vernacular rhymes during the early 1900s in San Francisco Chinatown? One possible line of inquiry might lie...
Journal Article
Genre (2003) 36 (1-2): 131–150.
Published: 01 March 2003
... . Stafford David . The Silent Game: The Real World of Imaginary Spies . Athens, GA : The University of Georgia Press , 1991 . Summerfield Penny Peniston-Bird Corinna . “ Women in the Firing Line: The Home Guard and the Defence of Gender Boundaries in Britain in the Second World War...
Journal Article
Genre (2013) 46 (3): 189–211.
Published: 01 December 2013
... . Translated by Rendall Steven . Berkeley : University of California Press . Chan Mary M. 2007 . “Location, Location, Location: The Spaces of Pride & Prejudice.” Persuasions On-line 27 . 2 . www.jasna.org/persuasions/on-line/vol27no2/chan.htm . Felski Rita . 2002...
Journal Article
Genre (2012) 45 (1): 143–166.
Published: 01 March 2012
... Stanzas as its longest section. As published in Poetry, “The Impossible” did not include citation information for quoted passages. Because previ- ous editions, including the 1956 Yale edition, are irregular in their numbering of the stanzas, I give citation information (part, stanza, and line numbers...
Journal Article
Genre (2012) 45 (1): 195–213.
Published: 01 March 2012
... discussion is characteristic: the poem “plays off [Dickinson’s] century’s wide- spread conception of woman as the ministering angel in the house and of poet as sensitive, suffering soul.” For Miller, the “Screws” of line four are those of women’s domestic duty, the “omnipresent demand” that “reduces...
Journal Article
Genre (2007) 40 (3-4): 201–210.
Published: 01 September 2007
... line from Galatians, which he views as a claim to universality that will result from Christians' fidelity to the event of the Resur- rection: "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus". This passage...
Journal Article
Genre (2003) 36 (1-2): 47–79.
Published: 01 March 2003
... that one might characterize as "delightful"— as if even an academic understanding of his verse manifests itself in "the easy language of well-bred talk" (a phrase the Norton uses to describe the poet's line) (2508). Pat Roger's preface to the Oxford Poetry Library's "selection" of what it calls...
Journal Article
Genre (2014) 47 (1): 79–102.
Published: 01 April 2014
... titular allusion holds the key to the novel’s thematic approach to mor- tality. Tellingly, when he quotes from the third stanza of Yeats’s poem, Roth leaves out the final line and a half. “Consume my heart away,” his first-­person narrator, David Kepesh, recalls, I am very grateful...