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queer temporality

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Journal Article
Romanic Review (2024) 115 (2): 342–361.
Published: 01 September 2024
... Lambert queer futurity queer temporality figure of the child child murder The achevé d’imprimer , or colophon, that comes at the end of any French published work literally has the last word, and it’s one that we usually don’t bother to look at. What interest is there, after all, in learning who...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2024) 115 (1): 134–150.
Published: 01 May 2024
... of these crossings helps reframe translation not as a single one-way trajectory from source to target language but rather as a multiple and dynamic back-and-forth and a temporal opening to new possibilities akin to the version of queerness suggested by José Esteban Muñoz as “the work of not settling for the present...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (3): 609–616.
Published: 01 December 2023
... and exciting analysis that Reeser tracks in French trans* studies, queer African studies, and recent work on temporality and historiography seem to pool locally (in Anglophone centers of research and teaching) rather than flow back to France. Bruno Perreau tracks the phenomenon of queer theory’s “late arrival...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2020) 111 (3): 441–454.
Published: 01 December 2020
...Jane Gallop Abstract The author traces her reading of Barthes’s 1973 book, Le Plaisir du texte , over the last five decades. Examining her published writings on the book, she traces how it meshes with her critical attachments to psychoanalysis, feminism, and queer theory. Claiming it as a text...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2009) 100 (4): 575–579.
Published: 01 November 2009
... that have a bearing on the alignment of qualities that define the self. One of the leitmotifs that runs through the book is that of the violent physical event that temporally suspends the self between life and death: Montaigne's fall from his horse, Rousseau's collision with a dog and carriage on the road...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (1): 103–124.
Published: 01 May 2023
..., an acceptance) of solitary life, where “anything can happen” (Levertov). Where the door to being’s possibilities is held open by the temporal refuge and elevated imagination that solitude affords, what poet Denise Levertov vividly celebrates as the “silvery now of living alone.” The gist of what I have...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (2): 341–359.
Published: 01 September 2023
... countries in Latin America, specifically Mexico, Argentina, and Chile. Works Cited Ahmed Sara . Queer Phenomenology: Orientations, Objects, Others . Durham, NC : Duke University Press , 2006 . Ahmed Sara . What’s the Use? On the Uses of Use . Durham, NC : Duke University Press...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (1): 161–188.
Published: 01 May 2023
... on the celebration of singularities—however queer—rather than on conformity. 24. The ways that discretio spirituum was employed by the church with specific attention to female spiritual authorization has been discussed at length by Nancy Caciola and, with a particular emphasis on Kempe, by Rosalynn Voaden...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2017) 108 (1-4): 105–109.
Published: 01 January 2017
... accurate. But reading and seeing, which is, in a way, akin to reading and understanding, took on a w­ hole new quality, a w­ hole new level of meaning, layered and intricate, ­after that first, unforgettable seminar with Ross: The Queer and the Creepy. And t­hose layers and intricacies of meaning w­ hat...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (1): 15–30.
Published: 01 May 2023
... the World Twice (2020). Courtesy of Kelly Akashi and François Ghebaly Gallery. Photograph by Thomas Clark / Clark Art Institute. But of course the work is also crucially not part of the landscape. Its materiality and temporality, static and enduring relative to the seasonally transformed forest...
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Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (3): 632–639.
Published: 01 December 2023
..., studies of the precolonial period reveal that both the categories of Arab and Berber (or Amazigh) do not refer to prediscursive, temporally stable groups of people. Rather, they constituted ever-changing discursive formations that actively legislated these social groups into a hierarchical order (Taha 22...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2012) 103 (1-2): 81–110.
Published: 01 January 2012
..." in relationship to those "orthodoxies" (or traditional practices), both dynamic yet temporally reified constructions, of both original cultures from which the colonized Indian, ladina, and mestizo live and think. As I explore below, this boundary crisscrossing of the apostate/heretic, Titu Cusi Yupanqui's tinkuy...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2010) 101 (4): 823–838.
Published: 01 November 2010
... is, instead, the ignorance of what appears and of those to whom it appears as appearing, in what Gillian Rose calls "the sensation and the envelope of visible and invisible beauty." 3 Ferzan Ozpetek's Ignorant Fairies is, as of this writing, the most commercially successful queer film in Italian cinematic...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (1): 1–14.
Published: 01 May 2023
..., for Chesterton is at once spatial and temporal: For the best things that happen to us are those we get out of what has already happened. If men were honest with themselves, they would agree that actual social engagements, even with those they love, often seem strangely brief, breathless, thwarted...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2007) 98 (2-3): 305–319.
Published: 01 May 2007
... of the Infinite: Borges and the Simulacrum." Hispanic Review 69:3 (Summer 2001): 355-77. Brant, Herbert. J. "The Queer Use of Communal Women in Borges's 'El muerto' and 'La Intrusa Hispan6fila 125 (Jan 1999): 37-50. Bravo, Pilar. "Borges: Gustos y dis-gustos." Revista de Occidente 268 (2003 Sept): 103-109...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2011) 102 (1-2): 129–144.
Published: 01 January 2011
... of a temporal delay for as long as he remains hidden, and in the displacement of the encounter onto another individual, Tartuffe. But if Orgon is aroused by the thought, sight, and sound of Elmire and Tartuffe together, where does Elmire stand in all this? We have established that, in marked contrast...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2024) 115 (2): 303–321.
Published: 01 September 2024
..., politique, et morale d’une société se révèle surtout par la vie sexuelle” (20). In what sounds like a slogan from 1968, all homosexuality is deemed an unconscious form of “homosexual Marxism” of which Proust is the Aristophanes or the Plutarch (20). The political unconscious of queer life is opposed...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2015) 106 (1-4): 125–143.
Published: 01 January 2015
... mari" (2: 139). The suggestion is that Monneville's identity as the "petite sreur" is the genuine one, at least to Lucile. Yet Monneville's "true" identity remains unclear to the reader. Is he pretending to be a girl, as he claims, or is Monneville, the man, his disguise? Bordering on a queer...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2007) 98 (4): 457–479.
Published: 01 November 2007
... tiempo suelen proporcionar a la persona debido al breve espacio temporal que separa una composicion de la otra, sino que se debe mas bien a la perspectiva desde la cual el poeta contempla el espectaculo de la "inversion sexual," es decir, al grado de riesgo personal que una tecnica u otra Ie representaba...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2022) 113 (2): 151–176.
Published: 01 September 2022
... of Heterosexual Sex in Medieval French Verse Romance .” Arthurian Literature , no. 36 ( 2021 ): 79 – 103 . Samuelson Charlie . Courtly and Queer: Deconstruction, Desire, and Medieval French Literature . Columbus : Ohio State University Press , 2022 . Scarry Elaine . “ Consent...