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  • 19 Jan 2023
    David Townsend

    When Medieval Silences Speak

    By the time I wrote Queering Medieval Latin Rhetoric: Silence, Subversion, and Sexual Heterodoxy, I’d spent thirty years loitering at the margins of medieval texts–squinting in the half-light, as it were, for signs of mutual recognition, like the sodomites of Dante’s Seventh Circle. But it’s the guesswork of cruising that’s most engaging. It took me […]

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  • 11 Jan 2023
    Amanda Holmes

    WHERE DID THE SCHOLARS GO?

    When you think about Latin American literature, you might first recall the magical realist novels that hit the international literary markets in the mid-twentieth century. This region’s literature might also evoke the names of certain traditionally canonical authors such as Gabriel García Márquez, Jorge Luis Borges, Octavio Paz, Julio Cortázar and Pablo Neruda. This heyday […]

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  • 11 Jan 2023
    Anna A. Berman

    Tolstoy in Our Times

    When the COVID-19 pandemic brought normal life to a halt in 2020, thousands of people around the globe began reading Lev Tolstoy’s War and Peace. Virtual reading groups, forums, and op-eds peppered the web. While many people cited the enormous length of the novel as a reason to read it during lockdown (when else?), the […]

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  • 10 Jan 2023
    Ullrich Langer

    It’s human to like literature, and it likes us back.

    My friend Heather Dubrow, critic and poet, turned to me and said: “The text as enemy.” She was commenting on a talk just given by a prominent literary scholar who championed literary criticism as a practice of unveiling prejudices, of revealing cultural bias, injustice and contradictions, and of cultivating distrust of language. Literature, in the […]

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  • 27 Dec 2022
    Jolene Hubbs

    Poor White Southerners in the American Imaginary

    Travel about twenty-five miles south from my house and eighty-seven years back in time and you’d have a shot at encountering one of the twentieth century’s most influential artists taking the picture shown above. In August 1936, Walker Evans traveled to Hale County, Alabama, with writer James Agee to document how poorly tenant-farming families were […]

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  • 23 Dec 2022
    Michael Wheeler

    LIVES, LOVES AND LETTERS OF 1845

    In my book The Old Enemies (CUP) I described 1845 as ‘a year of religious crises’. Later, when looking at broader trends that year, I was surprised by the sustained intensity of crises that also arose in three other areas of national life: Ireland, the ‘Condition of England’ and the railways. Deep concern about each […]

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  • 23 Dec 2022
    Paul Joseph Zajac

    Emotion and the Self in English Renaissance Literature

    Well over a decade ago, scholars acknowledged an “affective turn” or “turn to emotions” taking place across disciplines. Yet within the “turn to emotion,” certain types of emotion still turn up far more frequently than others. Reflecting long-standing trends in emotion science, scholars of the humanities have disproportionately focused on what we might call negative […]

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  • 13 Dec 2022
    Joseph Taylor

    Writing the North of England in the Middle Ages

    At Gateshead, along the A1 south of Newcastle, a 20-meter-high colossus stares out over the landscape. While some passersby have referred to it as the “Gateshead Flasher,” for its outstretched arms and wings, the 200-ton steel statue is actually the Angel of the North. Artist Antony Gormley’s creation is magnificent for many reasons, but I […]

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