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virtual
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Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2019) 80 (3): 344–346.
Published: 01 September 2019
...Stephen Arata Semi-detached: The Aesthetics of Virtual Experience since Dickens . By John Plotz . Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press , 2018 . xiii + 329 pp. Copyright © 2019 by University of Washington 2019 “For the whole of life is really like that,” wrote Ford...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2000) 61 (4): 692–696.
Published: 01 December 2000
...Ranjana Khanna Continental Drift: From National Characters to Virtual Subjects . By Emily Apter. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999. xv + 285 pp.$49.00 cloth, $19.00 paper. © 2000 University of Washington 2000 MLQ 61.4-05Reviews.cs 11/13/00 2:08 PM Page 683...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2001) 62 (4): 407–424.
Published: 01 December 2001
... Waste Land (2001) and is at work on a study of the visual arts, spectatorship, and modern literature. MLQ 62.4 07 North 10/24/01 5:53 PM Page 407
Virtual Histories: The Year as Literary Period
Michael North
hough the year 2000 ended only a year ago...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2012) 73 (2): 201–235.
Published: 01 June 2012
... of capitalist and imperial unfolding through the recurrence of Judaized otherness and virtualized Jewishness. Don Draper is a virtual Jew in whom the minority subject’s aberrant particularity and the majority subject’s universalist status collide, but serial forms like montage synchronize Don’s virtual...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2018) 79 (4): 373–396.
Published: 01 December 2018
...James Mulholland Abstract For decades scholars have relied on the concept of circulation to explain the operation of texts and to animate the significance of literary studies. Its overuse has elided differences in the virtual relationships created by reading and has blurred empirical details about...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2009) 70 (3): 319–340.
Published: 01 September 2009
...Donald Gilbert-Santamaría Culture of the Baroque offers José Antonio Maravall's most comprehensive vision of the baroque in Spain as a historical phenomenon that encompasses virtually all aspects of seventeenth-century social and cultural life. Maravall's study reappraises the conventional view...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2013) 74 (4): 465–492.
Published: 01 December 2013
... subjects into states to which they contribute virtually nothing, states of such intensity as to be hardly recognizable as human. Donne, Herbert, and Vaughan engage with concepts of liberty predictably, given their contexts and ours, but also in ways that are unpredictable and occasionally even startling...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1999) 60 (2): 251–264.
Published: 01 June 1999
...David Simpson H. Hartman Geoffrey. New York: Columbia University Press, 1997. 272 pp. $24.50. Copyright © 1999 by Duke University Press 1999 Reuieru Essay
Virtual Culture
David Simpson
The Fateful Questiun of Culture. By Geoffrey H. Hartman. New York: Columbia...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1995) 56 (3): 363–379.
Published: 01 September 1995
... with a certain fascination not unrelated to that of the flaneur.
Other theorists of the city, like the sociologist Georg Simmel, had
recourse to a certain nostalgia, opposing the natural life of the village
community to the new human organism, the city dweller, virtually cre-
ated by the frenetic pace...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2016) 77 (2): 193–217.
Published: 01 June 2016
... diffuse, readerships. 8 Unlike the coterie or the manuscript network, print circulation operated more or less independently of preexisting communities—virtually anyone could walk into a bookstall and ask for Greene’s latest romance—and audiences were thus more likely than ever to be composed...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2012) 73 (1): 1–12.
Published: 01 March 2012
....
The differentiating characteristics of the chip seem to be that it gives
quick access and that it creates virtual reality. I believe these two char-
acteristics of what we envisage as our present oblige us to study the past
as task. The past as task is of course held within...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2019) 80 (1): 37–49.
Published: 01 March 2019
... an academic voice. As it renounces writing that might be by anyone and addresses virtually anyone else, the institutionalizing process paradoxically reclassifies as personal the vicarious experience of novel reading long ascribed to untrained, popular, or common readers. By putting us in this political double...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1946) 7 (3): 366–367.
Published: 01 September 1946
...-36. Some of the material eventually
found its way into the Comic Annual and Up the Rhine, but it is
doubly entertaining in the first draft. There are delightful attacks,
written with the fervor of which only a displaced but home-loving
Englishman is capable, on virtually everything...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1994) 55 (3): 231–249.
Published: 01 September 1994
...
insightful suggestions during the writing of this essay.
Modern Language Quarterly 55:3, September 1994. 0 1994 University of Washington.
232 MIQ I September 1994
and Natalie Zemon Davis.3 And the answer has largely been that it is
virtually impossible to do...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1965) 26 (3): 369–374.
Published: 01 September 1965
... the creature is
apparent from his phrasing (“deceyvable,” “deceyvest”) and from his
development of the similitude. Moreover, treachery is virtually inher-
ent in the medieval scorpion, which was widely believed to behave in
the manner that Chaucer describes: to present to its victim a mild...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2018) 79 (1): 105–107.
Published: 01 March 2018
... subject matter relevant to virtually any topic. Astronomy and mathematics, metaphysics and aesthetics, politics and poetry, historiography and the novel, print media and digital media: there is something here, seemingly, for everybody. Occasionally the omnipresence of the system feels like a weakness...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2018) 79 (3): 289–307.
Published: 01 September 2018
... as in filling their minds and feelings with imaginary worlds. It is these virtual realities, rather than strictly literary ones, that have most performative efficacy these days to generate people’s feelings, behavior, and value judgments” (88). Miller’s gloss on Derrida’s conclusion is bleak: “The change...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2013) 74 (2): 239–260.
Published: 01 June 2013
..., are presented primarily in
terms of their generalized functions, as “receptacle, resource, record”
(Nethersole 2011); virtual (digital) libraries are glossed over as the
entire Internet, reducing their identity to information portals, archives,
or just search engines (Beebee 2011). Scholars have just...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1976) 37 (4): 393–395.
Published: 01 December 1976
... in this book is that of any consideration of the naturalist
novel. Zola is mentioned but once and summarily dismissed: “Zola’s narra-
tion adds virtually nothing to the techniques which Flaubert (and even
Balzac) had already made available to novelists” (p. 83). This is simply not
KEINHAKI...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2007) 68 (3): 437–440.
Published: 01 September 2007
... immaterial realm. The “metaphysical pretensions” of
romance (176) are perfected by Chaucer and others, who typically point to
“the book” that is not there as the raison d’être of the poem that is. Can-
non compares the process to the making of holograms, virtual objects that
produce information about...
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