Results 41 to 50 of about 237 (177)
Maps and Diaspora: Affect, Agency and Epistolary Praxis
Short Abstract Following discussions, interactions and reflections during the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) conference ‘Map Room Conversations’ sessions, this paper examines maps and diaspora through an affective lens. By utilising an auto‐ethnographic epistolary praxis of letter writing and employing the therapeutic prompt, ‘What came up for ...
Rohini Rai, Iqbal Singh
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Sound and visual symbolism in Mohja Kahf’s (an-nadb) poem “what do we do during genocide?”
This paper examines the elegiac expressions of pain, mourning, and resistance in Mohja Kahf’s poem “What Do We Do During Genocide?,” focusing on lamentation (an-nadb) as an aspect of elegy in Arabic poetry.
Hamida Riahi
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Abstract ‘I have to share a bathroom’, I had so often murmured, almost with shame, as if I personally had been found unworthy of a bathroom of my own. Barbara Pym, Excellent Women (1952) For a single woman of a certain age, living alone in postwar London, austerity was more than a set of political and economic imperatives.
Charlotte Charteris
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In Antígona González (2012), Sara Uribe reimagines the Sophoclean myth within the context of mass forced disappearances in northern Mexico, turning writing into an act of political and memorial resistance.
Geneviève Dragon
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The Political Novel in the Age of its Impotence: On Recent German Right‐Wing Fiction
Abstract While scholars have increasingly studied the German right's publishing strategies and literary politics, less attention has been paid to the literary texts as such. They are worth examining in detail, I argue here, because they reflect in exaggerated form a problem that troubles political novels more generally: the dwindling role of the novel ...
Sophie Salvo
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Crafting Spaces: Deleuzian Perspectives on Women's Identity Work in Male‐Dominated Jobs
ABSTRACT This paper proposes Deleuzian concepts of becoming minor, lines of flight, and deterritorialization and reterritorialization as a way of understanding identity work based on the experiences of women in male‐dominated jobs. We suggest that Deleuze's frame emphasizes fluidity and rejects category‐limited choices, and it opens up the possibility ...
Obaa Akua Konadu‐Osei +2 more
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HYDROCOLONIAL MEMORY, GENDERED TRAUMA AND QUEER ERASURE IN KOLEKA PUTUMA’S COLLECTIVE AMNESIA
Hydrocolonial Memory, Gendered Trauma and Queer Erasure in Koleka Putuma’s Collective Amnesia. This article contributes to the thematic direction of this volume by foregrounding post-liberal critical positions and adopting a methodological framework ...
Maria BOJAN
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ABSTRACT This paper interrogates the confessional foundations of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) work, which have emerged predominantly from Global North traditions rooted in Christian understandings of subjectivity. In such traditions, identity is asserted through self‐declaration, visibility, and vocal articulation of difference, what we term ...
Claudia Eger, Mustafa F. Özbilgin
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Hullo, Bu-Bye, Koko, Come In (Koleka Putuma)
Gorata Chengeta
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