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[ecrea] Now online ...Canadian Review of American Studies - Summer 2016
Tue Jul 19 18:49:56 GMT 2016
Volume 38, Number 3 /2008 of Canadian Review of American Studies is now
available on the utpjournals
/Now available online…/
**
*Canadian Review of American Studies*
Volume 46, Number 2, Summer 2016
http://bit.ly/cras462
*ARTICLES*
*Hashtagging Gaddis: /#OccupyGaddis’s/ Residual Adoption of William
Gaddis’s /J R/*
Philip Miletic
In 2012, Lee Konstantinou started an online reading group called
/#OccupyGaddis/ to discuss William Gaddis’s novel, /J R/. I argue that
#/OccupyGaddis/ rethinks Gaddis’s cynicism toward communication
technologies and reimagines the novel as a cultural study of how to
write and negotiate (fragmented) identities in the current global,
media-dominated culture. *http://bit.ly/crasaopj16g*
*For the Progress of “Faustus and Helen”: Crane, Whitman, and the
Metropolitan Progress Poem*
Jeremy Colangelo
This essay is meant to invigorate a critical discussion of the progress
poem—a genre that, while prevalent in American literature, has been
virtually ignored by critics and scholars. In lieu of tackling the genre
in its entirety, a project too large for just one article, the author
focuses the argument through the well-known alignment between Walt
Whitman and Hart Crane on the subject of the modern city. It is through
the progress poem genre that Crane and Whitman’s peculiar place in
metropolitan poetics can best be understood, and it is through their
poetry that scholars can begin to approach the broader issue of the
progress poem’s place in American literature. *http://bit.ly/crasaopj16h*
*Paradoxical Essentialism: Reading Race and Origins in Jane Jeong
Trenka’s Asian Adoption Memoirs*
Jenn Heijun Wills
I argue that anti-essentialism assumes a neutral or default subject for
whom biology and origins are both coherent and reliable. Analyzing Jane
Jeong Trenka’s two adoption memoirs, /The Language of Blood/ and
/Fugitive Visions/, I argue that anti-essentialism is a privileged
posture not afforded to everyone.***http://bit.ly/crasaopj16*
*Neoliberal Labour in Ramin Bahrani’s Films: Uneven Development,
Entrepreneurial Governmentality, and Political Resistance*
Polina Kroik
The essay analyzes representations of neoliberal labour in two films by
the U.S. filmmaker Ramin Bahrani: /Man Push Cart/ (2005) and /Chop Shop/
(2007). By focusing on working-class labour in New York’s informal
economy, the films undermine the prevalent characterization of
contemporary labour as “immaterial” and fundamentally new. The essay
argues that, in the latter film, the Willets Point neighbourhood appears
as an area of “uneven development,” which gives the working-class
characters a modicum of autonomy and a chance to transform their spaces.
Yet the films’ greatest strength is their resistance to clichéd
representations of working-class characters as oppressed
“others”—objects of ethnographic fascination and paternalistic sympathy.
Instead, Bahrani encourages the audience’s identification with the
characters by using innovative filmmaking practice and focusing on the
structures of “entrepreneurial governmentality,” usually associated with
white-collar work. Bahrani’s films also highlight the contradictions of
contemporary filmmaking and neoliberal culture. *http://bit.ly/crasaopj16b*
*Archival Futurism in Paul Auster’s /The Book of Illusions/*
David Huebert
Through a reading of Paul Auster’s 2002 novel /The Book of Illusions/,
this article explores the archival impulse in the context of queer
theorist Lee Edelman’s schematization of “reproductive futurism.” I
argue that /The Book of Illusions/ positions the archive, rather than
the child, as the object of futurity and suggest that Auster explores
what I term “archival futurism” through two competing visions of the
archive: David Zimmer, the protagonist of /The Book of Illusions/, seeks
to extend human life through the archive, exhibiting a pathological
archive mania following the death of his family; Hector Mann, in
contrast, exemplifies a queered vision of the traditional archive,
rejecting futurity by destroying the archive of films he has been making
for sixty-odd years. Mann ultimately overcomes the archive while Zimmer
remains feverishly devoted to it.***http://bit.ly/crasaopj16c*
*Amiri Baraka: A Lifetime of Saying the Unsayable*
Naila Keleta-Mae
Through the analysis of three poems written at distinct moments in his
prolific fifty-year career, this article argues that a central legacy of
the work of Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) is the creation of art and
scholarship that publicly critiques and provokes the status quo—time and
time again, Baraka said the unsayable. *http://bit.ly/crasaopj16a*
*AMERICAN STUDIES IN REVIEW*
*The Minoritarian Turn in Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies*
Justin Rogers-Cooper
Three recent publications in nineteenth-century American literary
studies are compelling examples of the field’s turn toward
“minoritarian” criticism, a mode of inquiry that draws on a variety of
“minor” movements in scholarship such as queer studies and critical race
and ethnic studies. The collection of essays in /Unsettled States/
exemplify the minoritarian impulse to treat literary and archival texts
as theoretical objects coeval with the authority of contemporary
scholarship and cultural theory. One of the contributors to /Unsettled
States/, Kyla Wazana Tompkins, also authored /Racial Indigestion/, a
foundational text in recent food studies that authoritatively traces the
erotic politics of the mouth over the long nineteenth century. In /The
Delectable Negro/, the late Vincent Woodward provocatively addresses the
ways bodies of enslaved African Americans were cannibalized,
metaphorically and literally, by parasitic slave masters. All three
texts stake out new practices, objects, and methods for the field, and
suggest vital new directions for future scholarship.
*http://bit.ly/crasaopj16f*
_________________________________________________
*COMPLETE ARCHIVE NOW AVAILABLE! *
*/Canadian Review of American Studies Online/*now offers a comprehensive
resource for the best work being done in American Studies today. /CRAS
Online/ now includes the complete archive of current and previously
published articles – more than 1200 articles, reviews and commentaries –
going back to 1970(issue1.1). http://bit.ly/cras_online
//
*/Canadian Review of American Studies/**is available online at*
*Project MUSE*- http://bit.ly/cras_pm
*/CRAS Online/*- http://bit.ly/cras_online
*Submissions to /Canadian Review of American Studies/*
/The Canadian Review of American Studies/is published three times a
year. The journal publishes articles, review articles, and short
reviews; its purpose is to further multi- and interdisciplinary analyses
of the culture of the United States and of the social relations between
the United States and Canada. The journal invites contributions, in
English and French, from authors in all relevant scholarly disciplines
related to the study of the United States, and the United States and
Canada, as well as to the borders “in-between.” The Canadian Review of
American Studies has an international standing, attracting submissions
and participation from many countries in North America and Europe.
Recently, the journal has received and published articles from the
following disciplines: Anthropology, English, History, American Studies,
Canadian Studies, Political Science, Sociology, Communication, Law,
African-American Studies, Religious Studies, Economics, Fine Arts,
Cultural Studies, and Humanities.
*For submission guidelines, please visit www.utpjournals.com/CRAS or
contact us at:*
Canadian Review of American Studies
Department of English, Carleton University
1125 Colonel By Drive
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1S 5B6
E-mail: (cras /at/ carleton.ca) <mailto:(cras /at/ carleton.ca)>
Fax: (613) 234-4418
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