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difference and dialogical meaning

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Journal Article
Romanic Review (2021) 112 (2): 189–212.
Published: 01 September 2021
.... Reflecting on the dialogical generation of meaning, I trace the ways in which reading Balzac and Sand together reveals a complex and continuing conversation between the two authors about similarity, difference, and the dialectical nature of identity. This ongoing intertextual exchange, I argue, helps us see...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2007) 98 (2-3): 265–273.
Published: 01 May 2007
...: as "a play of differences, of the traces of differences, of the spacing by means of which elements are related to each other" (Positions 27). 268 NATALY TCHEREPAsHENETs The Emperor's actions and meditations also evoke Derrida's approach to history as a contradictory concept.? Although the French philosopher...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2012) 103 (1-2): 255–272.
Published: 01 January 2012
..." dialogical" in any meaningful sense of the word? With respect to the church scene in Manon, it is a fairly innocent metaphor to say that the voices of Prevost, Eisenstein, and Cocteau meet in Clouzot's film. To say that they meet dialogically would be a hypothesis demanding analysis beyond a convincing...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2007) 98 (4): 323–341.
Published: 01 November 2007
... the stories in a collective dialogue of a classical Ciceronian character (whereby the discussions often exceed the novellas in length). Against this background of dynamics between dialogue and novella, I would like to propose a different interpretation of Marguerite's Chastelaine de Vergi recasting. First, I...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2010) 101 (4): 639–654.
Published: 01 November 2010
... the odd man out, if not simply the villain, of a dialogue devoted to exploring the causes of the decline of Roman eloquence. Aper advances a sort of aesthetic relativism often appropriated by the eclectic humanists of the Renaissance when he declares that "what is different is not worse," and it falls...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2016) 107 (1-4): 77–102.
Published: 01 January 2016
... of likeness and difference and profound resemblances between this pair of pseudonymous authors, even given that George Sand wrote much which no one can even imagine an Englishwoman to have written (561). Henry James, an admirer of both, further reflected on the dialogic nature of contemporary responses...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2021) 112 (2): 235–260.
Published: 01 September 2021
... and real members of the new celebrity culture (of which she herself was a part, whether she liked it or not.). 24 A final irony of Marni’s self-parody: where Mlle Ocarina resorts to fabricating dialogue because she fails to engage in meaningful conversation in her interviews, Jeanne Marni’s “dialogues...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2012) 103 (3-4): 275–283.
Published: 01 May 2012
... initially appear. For it begs the question-crucial to the dialogue as a whole-of how the contact (sexual or otherwise) between the various interlocutors in Le Reve de d'Alembert affects the unity of their selves. When MIle de Lespinasse moves closer to d'Alembert to take his pulse (but cannot find his hand...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2001) 92 (3): 245–258.
Published: 01 May 2001
... talk of the transposition of a monologue rather than of a dialogue. Call the sender A, the message B, the receiver C. Since the discourse involves rediscovering the design of nature, it can only have one meaning, one direction, until it is complete. We see in the projection of this message a triple...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2020) 111 (1): 48–65.
Published: 01 May 2020
... into being as a new unit. By extrapolation, the Rettorica in turn becomes a tencione-tacita mediator within different worknets, engaging multiple clusters of Florentines in its work of change and negotiation. And because the tencione is inherently dialogic, it should fit the requirements of Latourian...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2006) 97 (3-4): 265–274.
Published: 01 May 2006
... differences and aspires "toward the universal." Focusing on particular moments of dialogue and disjunction between the Italian and French national traditions, the essays that follow 1. A. R. Ammons, The Selected Poems (Expanded Edition) (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1986), 43, 46. The Romanic Review Volume...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2024) 115 (2): 473–496.
Published: 01 September 2024
... thus becomes a form of struggle, and struggle—their concrete practices of resistance—a form of forcing a dialogue with authority. Finally, the activists also understand very clearly the bidirectional meaning of translation as a strategy for democratic inclusion. Translation is a vehicle for normalizing...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (1): 125–140.
Published: 01 May 2023
..., newly mixed and always altered, in our own voices. Of course people in immediate conversation will influence one another’s words and even ideas; this is the difference between dialogue and dual monologues. But more fundamentally, and over a longer time, the voices that we hear or read reemerge...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2013) 104 (1-2): 105–126.
Published: 01 January 2013
... of Artaud's "themes" from those parts of the texts that remain readable. Both attitudes, however, fail to take into account the nature of the dialogue between readability and unreadability, between meaning and nonmeaning, that is established by Artaud's particular torquing of language. The very structure...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2000) 91 (1-2): 204–207.
Published: 01 January 2000
...Terri J. Gordon 204 BOOK REVIEWS of Surrealist code: " [where] the products of the unconscious were interchangeably dreams or poems " (p. 251). It does not go without saying that readers know the difference between an automatic (in Breton's understanding of automatic) transcription of various...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2017) 108 (1-4): 115–134.
Published: 01 January 2017
... with trafficking in the twelfth-­century Ordo representaciones Ade, an astounding Play of Adam that trades in religion openly and undercover. When polemical contestation between Old Law and New leads to figurative encounters between Jews and Christians, their dialogue and disputations make rival claims on who...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (1): 103–124.
Published: 01 May 2023
... Solitude! if I must with thee dwell, Let it not be among the jumbled heap Of murky buildings —Keats, “O Solitude!” The following is a meditation on solitude and loneliness. On being alone with no one else in the room and also on what it means to be alone, perhaps most acutely and viscerally...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2009) 100 (4): 493–512.
Published: 01 November 2009
... "les tenebres de notre Antiquite moderne" pithily summarizes the argument of Chapelain's dialogue. In its most superficial meaning, it simply points to the fact that Chapelain's contemporaries had their own antiquity, which was different from the antiquity of the Ancients. But it is also enigmatic...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2008) 99 (3-4): 257–270.
Published: 01 May 2008
... to their proper rung through magical means. 1 His eclectic mix of novellas and fairy tales proved to be wildly popular with readers. Le piacevoli notti enjoyed more than twenty printings in Italy in the first fifty years following the editio princeps and was quickly translated into French and Spanish.2 And yet...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2014) 105 (3-4): 319–340.
Published: 01 May 2014
..., and thereby takes a creative role in the production of meaning. Like writing, speech can be characterized in either sense. If one interlocutor concedes entirely to what the other says, their conversation might seem to lack any meaningful interaction 3. Respectively, these arguments appear in La Dissemination...