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Journal Article
Romanic Review (2005) 96 (1): 3–18.
Published: 01 January 2005
...Theresa Ann Sears Copyright © 2005 The Trustees of Columbia University 2005 Theresa Ann Sears SQUARING THE ROUND TABLE: TIME, HIERARCHY, AND THE FALL OF CAMELOT R omance is, by its nature, a protean narrative form, one that can undergo significant changes and still remain true to itself...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2006) 97 (1): 15–32.
Published: 01 January 2006
...Greg Hainge Copyright © 2006 The Trustees of Columbia University 2006 Grego Hail1goe TEMPEST IN ANOTHER TIME: SHAKESPEARE, GREENAWAY, CELINE I t is well known that Louis-Ferdinand Celine read Shakespeare and that he admired his works greatly-indeed, Celine's own works are rife with allusions...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2009) 100 (3): 203–213.
Published: 01 May 2009
...Michelle Miller Copyright © 2009 The Trustees of Columbia University 2009 Michelle Miller KEEPING TIME WITH THE TALES: REPETITION, EPIPHANY, AND THE HEPTAMERON'S NARRATIVE CHANGE D espite the Heptameron's near-pastoral setting, its characters appear strikingly attentive to the passing of time...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2014) 105 (3-4): 273–291.
Published: 01 May 2014
...Ann T. Delehanty Copyright © 2014 The Trustees of Columbia University 2014 Ann T. Delehanty KAIROS AND THE PASCALIAN MODEL OF TIME AND HISTORY Jesus said to them, "My time [kairos] has not yet come, but your time [kairos] is always here." -John 7.6, New Revised Standard Version Blessed is he...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2024) 115 (2): 239–259.
Published: 01 September 2024
... ultimately that, in dark and disorienting times, literature—which perhaps does nothing so well as help us to grapple with the ways in which the past and the present, and thus any possible futurity, are mutually entrammeled with one another—may help us get certain ideas, if not infallibly right, a little less...
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Published: 01 September 2021
figure 2. New York Times International Edition , May 12, 2020, 11.
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Journal Article
Romanic Review (2020) 111 (3): 430–439.
Published: 01 December 2020
... completes the experiences of involuntary memory that ground his whole theory of regained time— and also has experiences that contradict the theory, that show time to be ever-elapsing, impossible to regain. He doesn’t endorse the contradiction, and he doesn’t give up his theory. But he doesn’t erase...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2022) 113 (1): 112–130.
Published: 01 May 2022
...Julie Singer Abstract Sociological research on chronic illness, and especially on the autobiographical writings of modern patients, has yielded insights into how chronic conditions alter fundamental relationships between notions of self, body, and time. The chronic part of “chronic illness” can...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (1): 189–205.
Published: 01 May 2023
... than when alone. Because the wise man reads books and perhaps corresponds with other writers of his day, he feels himself to be in the company of those whose works he is studying. In the Renaissance, however, the humanist feels alienated from the time period in which he is living, and he reads to place...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2021) 112 (1): 73–84.
Published: 01 May 2021
... allusive quotations, Dante opposes to the absolute time of Eden the idea of an imperfect time, tied to the pattern of an all-human knowledge, which Dante himself connected to the teaching and character of Brunetto Latini. Opere Citate Alighieri Dante . La Commedia secondo l’antica vulgata...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (2): 380–400.
Published: 01 September 2023
... or trash, repurposed tools or ruins, personal souvenirs or museum pieces. However, the rural, at times impoverished, at times gentrified, may lack names for its materials. Pichel’s self-translation Cativa en su lughar ( Cativa in Her Place , 2013) gets this point across by using familiar Castrapo rather...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2024) 115 (1): 59–84.
Published: 01 May 2024
...Chris Clarke Abstract This essay examines the complex role of the poet-translator through the specific case of the collaborative relationship between Mexican poet Octavio Paz and his long-time translator, the American poet Muriel Rukeyser. The article first outlines the role of literary translation...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2021) 112 (2): 321–335.
Published: 01 September 2021
...Priya Wadhera Abstract In Word of Mouth: What We Talk about When We Talk about Food (2014), Priscilla Parkhurst Ferguson discusses “food fears,” recognizing how food can be both a source of sustenance and pleasure and, at the same time, a site of danger and death. In this article, I endeavor...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2021) 112 (3): 423–436.
Published: 01 December 2021
... for a laywoman at the time. [email protected] Copyright © 2021 by the Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York 2021 Marie de Gournay religious controversy confession laxism rigorism Ah mon, Dieu! Pardonnez-moy-Sire, d’oser armer ma quenouille pour me mesler à ces...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2021) 112 (3): 437–451.
Published: 01 December 2021
... art of ambiguity: through her involvement with the first readers of La Rochefoucauld’s Maximes and her relations with the nuns of Port-Royal, Sablé aims to preserve her own viewpoint and her friendships at the same time. These ambiguities lead to the hypothesis that she faced gendered limits...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2021) 112 (2): 336–358.
Published: 01 September 2021
.... Examining an overlooked corpus of primary school readers and textbooks, I show that food and cooking provided object lessons imparting practical and scientific knowledge to enlighten the masses, and textbooks canonized regional specialties as part of a new national geographic consciousness. At the same time...
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Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (1): 103–124.
Published: 01 May 2023
...” and at the same time more fully in tune with oneself. The interlude introduces a brief parenthesis, intended less as a provocation and more as a clarifying interruption to distinguish between lonely and solitary modes of living. Finally, Act 3 wanders into the realm of poetics and aims to think about the strange...
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Journal Article
Romanic Review (2023) 114 (2): 259–279.
Published: 01 September 2023
... allied with Juan de Herrera’s designs to project an immutability beyond space and time, Sigüenza, this article shows, enacts a ventriloquist mimicking of artisanal practice that vindicates process and local experience in conflict with the notion of a petrified center of empire. It also examines...
Journal Article
Romanic Review (2020) 111 (1): 8–26.
Published: 01 May 2020
... that inhabit it, as well as to the ways in which myths solicit representation in material form. In this instance, material form is a medieval manuscript, one that can be read, through a Latourian lens, as a set of category crossings that bring together points in space and time. Those points are not organized...
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Journal Article
Romanic Review (2024) 115 (2): 303–321.
Published: 01 September 2024
... classes. The second part of the essay turns to Benjamin, Bataille, and Blanchot, for whom his novel altered conventional notions of justice, desire, figural language, and the structure of time through the experience of writing. Across the political spectrum, readings of Proust pit the rhetoric...
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