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	<title>MLA Commons | Jose Manuel Delpino Vivas | Group Activity</title>
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	<description>Public group activity feed of which Jose Manuel Delpino Vivas is a member.</description>
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				<title>MelissaBarchi Panek replied to the topic CFP: MLA 2027 (Los Angeles) — Mediated Futures: Technology and Transformation in the forum CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-mla-2027-los-angeles-mediated-futures-technology-and-transformation/#post-1040868</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2026 02:15:00 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Call for Papers</strong></p>
<p><strong>Comparative Literature and Culture Studies (20th–21st Century)</strong><br />
Modern Language Association Conference, January 7-10 Los Angeles<br />
<strong>Electronic Roundtable (8 participants)</strong></p>
<p><strong>Mediated Futures: Technology, Transformation, and the Literary-Cultural Field</strong></p>
<p>This electronic roundtable invites short, exploratory interventions on the t&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1944149"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-mla-2027-los-angeles-mediated-futures-technology-and-transformation/#post-1040868" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Ryan Calabretta-Sajder started the topic Teaching Assistant Professor of World Languages &#38; Humanities Technologies in the forum CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/teaching-assistant-professor-of-world-languages-humanities-technologies-3/</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 10 Dec 2025 23:50:52 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Please consider applying and share widely!</p>
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				<title>Lisa Nalbone started the topic CFP: Amplifying Women’s Voices of Resistance in the forum CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-amplifying-womens-voices-of-resistance/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 03 Apr 2025 15:53:35 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>CFP for “Amplifying Women’s Voices of Resistance: Challenging Power, Shaping Change”, for a special issue of the <em>South Atlantic Review: The Journal of the South Atlantic Modern Language Association</em>.</p>
<p>This special issue seeks to honor and amplify the voices of women who have resisted, challenged, and redefined societal norms—both histori&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1915773"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-amplifying-womens-voices-of-resistance/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Shashi Bhusan Nayak started the topic Call for Chapters – Scripting Selves: New Directions in Life Writing in the forum TM Literary Criticism</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-criticism/forum/topic/call-for-chapters-scripting-selves-new-directions-in-life-writing-6/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2025 19:40:01 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Scripting Selves: New Directions in Life Writing</strong><br />
<strong>Editors: P. Muralidhar Sharma &amp; Shashibhusan Nayak</strong></p>
<p>Until recently, Life Writing has emerged as a loose critical label encompassing a variety of genres, including biographies, autobiographies, memoirs, letters, and dairies. The later decades of the 20th century, in particular, have witnessed a surge&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1913204"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-criticism/forum/topic/call-for-chapters-scripting-selves-new-directions-in-life-writing-6/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Shashi Bhusan Nayak started the topic Call for Chapters – Scripting Selves: New Directions in Life Writing in the forum TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-and-cultural-theory/forum/topic/call-for-chapters-scripting-selves-new-directions-in-life-writing-5/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 04 Mar 2025 19:32:13 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Scripting Selves: New Directions in Life Writing</strong><br />
<strong>Editors: P. Muralidhar Sharma &amp; Shashibhusan Nayak</strong></p>
<p>Until recently, Life Writing has emerged as a loose critical label encompassing a variety of genres, including biographies, autobiographies, memoirs, letters, and dairies. The later decades of the 20th century, in particular, have witnessed a surge&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1913202"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-and-cultural-theory/forum/topic/call-for-chapters-scripting-selves-new-directions-in-life-writing-5/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Stefania Irene Sini uploaded the file: CFP: Limits of Narrative. 8th International Conference of the European Narratology Network (ENN), Wuppertal, Germany, September 29 - October 2, 2025 to TM Literary Criticism</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1912534/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 25 Feb 2025 15:18:06 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In view of the rampant use of the term ‘narrative’, which often enough lacks a precise meaning, it is time to take a critical look at its limits. The 8th ENN conference in Wuppertal (Germany) is dedicated to this reflection on the concept of narrative in order to sharpen it by defining its boundaries: Which phenomena cannot be appropriately lab&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1912534"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1912534/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Michael Subialka started the topic CFP "Who Do We Resemble? Selfhood, Perception, and Modernist Multiplicity" MLA in the forum CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-who-do-we-resemble-selfhood-perception-and-modernist-multiplicity-mla/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 25 Feb 2025 00:17:20 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Luigi Pirandello’s <em>One, No One, and One Hundred Thousand</em> (1926) presents a radical meditation on the fragmentation of identity, the impossibility of “true” self-perception, and the crisis of being seen differently by others. Published exactly a century ago, the novel interrogates the ways in which individuals exist not as unified selves but as&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1912483"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-who-do-we-resemble-selfhood-perception-and-modernist-multiplicity-mla/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<guid isPermaLink="false">a8da52a82eba4d12541d7a4ee2f831fd</guid>
				<title>Ryan Calabretta-Sajder started the topic Session 413: Navigating the Academy: A Mentoring Session in the forum CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/session-413-navigating-the-academy-a-mentoring-session-4/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 09 Jan 2025 16:10:30 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>MLA 2025 Convention</strong></p>
<p><strong>MLA Committee on Women, Gender, and Sexuality in the Profession</strong></p>
<p><strong>Session 413: Navigating the Academy: A Mentoring Session</strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p>NB: Session Information Follows. The mentoring session will continue informally following the roundtable via happy hour. Location: Ernst Café (600 S. Peters St.; across the street from the Hilton R&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1908378"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/session-413-navigating-the-academy-a-mentoring-session-4/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Leigh A. Neithardt started the topic Membership Suggestions for 2025 Forum Delegate Election  in the forum CLCS Hemispheric American</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/hemispheric-american/forum/topic/membership-suggestions-for-2025-forum-delegate-election-6/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 19 Dec 2024 16:53:41 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span>Hello!</span></p>
<p><span>The next election for this forum’s Delegate Assembly representative will be held in the fall of </span><span>2025</span><span>, and the forum’s executive committee will take up the matter of nominations for this election when it meets in January </span><span>2025</span><span>. Though the executive committee is responsible for making nominations, it is required to nominate at least one can&hellip;</span><span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1907167"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/hemispheric-american/forum/topic/membership-suggestions-for-2025-forum-delegate-election-6/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Thomas Oliver Beebee started the topic CFP for "Reading Cultures," a special issue of the journal Culture as Text in the forum TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-and-cultural-theory/forum/topic/cfp-for-reading-cultures-a-special-issue-of-the-journal-culture-as-text-2/</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 18 Oct 2024 11:34:40 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Reading Cultures</em></p>
<p>A special issue of the journal <a href="https://www.degruyter.com/journal/key/cat/html" rel="nofollow ugc">Culture as Text (degruyter.com)</a>.</p>
<p>Guest Editor: Thomas O. Beebee, Penn State University (Emeritus)</p>
<p>It is common practice among literary scholars to divide their field into a variety of authorial strategies and attachments, e.g. by form, genre, style or literary movement. Romanticism generally makes&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1902037"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-and-cultural-theory/forum/topic/cfp-for-reading-cultures-a-special-issue-of-the-journal-culture-as-text-2/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Weihsin Gui started the topic CFP: Special Topic in Antipodes journal on "Australia And..." in the forum CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-special-topic-in-antipodes-journal-on-australia-and-7/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 08 Oct 2024 01:26:40 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>CFP: Special Topic in Antipodes: A Global Journal of Australian and New Zealand Literature &#8212; “Australia And&#8230;”</p>
<p>Priority Deadline 1 November 2024</p>
<p>Antipodes invites articles for a special feature section in Antipodes, journal of the American Association for Australasian Studies (AAALS) that considers a literary or cultural work (including fil&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1901070"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-special-topic-in-antipodes-journal-on-australia-and-7/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Aarthi Vadde started the topic CFP: Novel Languages (Society of Novel Studies Biennial Conference) in the forum CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-novel-languages-society-of-novel-studies-biennial-conference-3/</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 28 Aug 2024 18:03:14 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Biennial Conference of the Society for Novel Studies 2025: NOVEL LANGUAGES</p>
<p><em>Hosted by Duke University (Organizers: Aarthi Vadde and Sarah Quesada)</em></p>
<p><strong>Location:</strong> Durham Convention Center in beautiful Downtown Durham!</p>
<p><strong>Dates:</strong> May 29-June 1, 2025</p>
<p><strong>SUBMISSION DEADLINE:</strong> Abstracts due November 15, 2024 to the conference website: h&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1897416"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-novel-languages-society-of-novel-studies-biennial-conference-3/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Brian Gregory Caraher deposited Review of Joseph O'Neill, in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1890598/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 29 Jun 2024 03:00:27 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Early, refereed review of Joseph O&#8217;Neill&#8217;s third, groundbreaking novel set in post-9/11 New York City: the review charts key plot developments, a transatlantic mapping of the characters (Netherlands, Trinidad, UK and US) and its structural similarities to F Scott Fitzgerald&#8217;s &#8220;The Great Gatsby&#8221;.  Originally published in the third issue of the&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1890598"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1890598/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Brian Gregory Caraher deposited "Gently, gently Northern Ire! Love that red hand!": Teaching James Joyce in Northern Ireland in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1890207/</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 26 Jun 2024 03:00:03 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This paper describes the social and cultural climate of teaching the works of James Joyce &#8212; including his journalism and major works of fiction from &#8220;Dubliners&#8221; through &#8220;Ulysses&#8221; and &#8220;Finnegans Wake&#8221; &#8212; over the years 1993 to 2016 when the author was the Chair of English Literature at Queen&#8217;s University Belfast.  The author draws upon his&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1890207"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1890207/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Katina Rogers deposited The Presence of Absence: Meditations on the Unsayable in Writing in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1889658/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 20 Jun 2024 03:01:53 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Presence of Absence: Meditations on the Unsayable in Writing is about writers navigating the unspeakable through image, sound, and structure. Each chapter focuses on a specific text, exploring the ways that four writers look to visual and auditory materials and metaphors as passageways to understanding and expressing the ineffable qualities of&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1889658"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1889658/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Ji Eun Lee deposited Wooshing London: Unsettling Acceleration in H. G. Wells’s Tono-Bungay in the group TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1889190/</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 14 Jun 2024 03:31:49 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This essay reads H. G. Wells’s Tono-Bungay (1909) in the context of “wooshing” London—I take the word from the story—to see how the unsettling effect of this rapid urban mobility translates into the generic form of the novel. At the turn of the twentieth century, London was wooshing—that is to say, people and things in the city were moving by b&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1889190"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1889190/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Regenia Gagnier deposited Language and literature in the information economy: the state of English, English and the state in the group TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1887294/</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 27 May 2024 04:09:13 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The impact of colonialism and empire and then of transport, logistics, advertising, media, cinema, radio, tourism, and the internet extended the global reach of English. With 1.13 billion speakers, one in seven in the world now has some English competence. Within this global circulation of English, we have the global teaching of English language&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1887294"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1887294/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Dustin Friedman deposited Toward a Decolonial Queer Humanism: Thomas Hardy's The Well-Beloved and André Aciman's Call Me by Your Name in the group TM Literary Criticism</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1878059/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 29 Feb 2024 04:09:12 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This essay situates queer negativity within the modernist tradition. In The Well-Beloved (1897), Thomas Hardy satirizes the then-popular notion of racial memory for its racist, colonialist implications, inaugurating the modernist critique of romantic love as complicit with the self-delusions of the liberal-humanist subject. Despite the view shared&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1878059"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1878059/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Dustin Friedman deposited Toward a Decolonial Queer Humanism: Thomas Hardy's The Well-Beloved and André Aciman's Call Me by Your Name in the group TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1878058/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 29 Feb 2024 04:05:36 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This essay situates queer negativity within the modernist tradition. In The Well-Beloved (1897), Thomas Hardy satirizes the then-popular notion of racial memory for its racist, colonialist implications, inaugurating the modernist critique of romantic love as complicit with the self-delusions of the liberal-humanist subject. Despite the view shared&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1878058"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1878058/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Hania A.M. Nashef deposited Inhabiting a Comfortable Fiction of the Self: J.M. Coetzee’s            Summertime in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1877009/</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 19 Feb 2024 04:00:11 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Abstract<br />
In his email conversations with Arabella Kurtz in The Good Story: Exchanges on Truth, Fiction and Psychotherapy, J.M. Coetzee entertains the notion of settling on fictions of ourselves, which we are able to inhabit more comfortably than what is perceived as our real life.  In addition, he implies that in order to form fictions of&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1877009"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1877009/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Lupe Escobar started the topic CFP: Cold War Afterlives in the discussion CLCS Hemispheric American</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/hemispheric-american/forum/topic/cfp-cold-war-afterlives/</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 07 Feb 2024 13:29:08 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Frames of war generally magnify precarity, heightening bodily vulnerability, albeit differentially. How do transamerican narrative practices rupture temporal logic to respond to the lasting impact of the Cold War? Send 250-word abstract with C.V.</p>
<p><strong>Deadline for submissions:</strong> Friday, 15 March 2024</p>
<p>Guadalupe Escobar, U of Nevada, R&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1874916"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/hemispheric-american/forum/topic/cfp-cold-war-afterlives/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Maybel Mesa Morales replied to the topic CFP: Temporalities of the Cuban Revolution in the discussion CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/20th-and-21st-century/forum/topic/cfp-temporalities-of-the-cuban-revolution-3/#post-1037305</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 01 Feb 2024 22:20:27 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Deadline: Friday, 15 March 2024</p>
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				<title>Regenia Gagnier deposited The Geopolitics of Beauty in the group TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1870902/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 13 Jan 2024 04:04:41 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Building on eighteenth-century philosophical traditions, Victorian aesthetics were often posed as an antidote to the vicissitudes of the Industrial Revolution and the political and economic demands of the marketplace, and in most cultures undergoing modernization the Beautiful has often functioned in opposition to the forces of power and&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1870902"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1870902/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Regenia Gagnier deposited The Futures of English: Introduction from the UK in the group TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1870893/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 13 Jan 2024 03:10:19 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Will students raised on social media still read English literature?<br />
• What is the role of English/American literature in the PRC, India,<br />
Australasia, the USA?<br />
• What is the role of English language in relation to other global<br />
and local languages?<br />
• What is the role of decolonising efforts?<br />
• How do our respective state apparatuses affect&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1870893"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1870893/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Shashi Bhusan Nayak started the topic Call For Book Chapters: Beyond Networks of Domination: Rethinking Machinic Media in the discussion TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-and-cultural-theory/forum/topic/call-for-book-chapters-beyond-networks-of-domination-rethinking-machinic-media/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 30 Dec 2023 10:47:52 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Call For Book Chapters: Beyond Networks of Domination: Rethinking Machinic Media, Digitality &amp; Cinema of our Times</strong></p>
<p><strong>Editors: Ananya Roy Pratihar(IMIS,Bhubaneswar), Saswat Samay Das (IIT, Kharagpur) &amp; Shashibhushan Nayak(GP Nayagarh)</strong></p>
<p>The biopolitical schemas for restructuring machinic networks of Media, Digital, and cinema do not stand as&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1869434"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-and-cultural-theory/forum/topic/call-for-book-chapters-beyond-networks-of-domination-rethinking-machinic-media/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Fatma Fulya Tepe started the topic New creative feminist work: A Misogynist Triptych from 1945 in the discussion TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-and-cultural-theory/forum/topic/new-creative-feminist-work-a-misogynist-triptych-from-1945/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 05 Dec 2023 14:28:19 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Colleagues,</p>
<p>I , Assoc. Prof. Dr. Fatma Fulya Tepe, from Istanbul Aydin University, Faculty of Education and Emeritus Prof. Dr. Per Bauhn from Sweden’s Linnaeus University prepared “A Misogynist Triptych from 1945” based on cartoon material coming from the Turkish Boşboğaz (Bigmouth) Humor Gazette from 1945. This project was supported by the&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1866819"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-and-cultural-theory/forum/topic/new-creative-feminist-work-a-misogynist-triptych-from-1945/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Hania A.M. Nashef deposited Canines: Unlikely Protagonists in the Novels of Coetzee, Saramago and Shibli in the group TM Literary Criticism</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1865793/</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 24 Nov 2023 04:06:46 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anthropomorphism, which combines two Greek words, anthropos and morphe, meaning “human” and “form’ respectively, is a term that reflects our attribution of human characteristics to non-human animals and objects, bestowing upon them agency (Taylor 2011: 266). In this respect, we elevate the status of the non-human animal, moving it from being a&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1865793"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1865793/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Hania A.M. Nashef deposited Canines: Unlikely Protagonists in the Novels of Coetzee, Saramago and Shibli in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1865788/</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 24 Nov 2023 04:00:13 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anthropomorphism, which combines two Greek words, anthropos and morphe, meaning “human” and “form’ respectively, is a term that reflects our attribution of human characteristics to non-human animals and objects, bestowing upon them agency (Taylor 2011: 266). In this respect, we elevate the status of the non-human animal, moving it from being a&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1865788"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1865788/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Mike Phillips deposited Through a Tube, Darkly: Critical Remediation in High and Low (1963) in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1863744/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 07 Nov 2023 03:00:24 -0500</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Akira Kurosawa’s 1963 police procedural  is, as its title suggests, intensely interested in the socioeconomic valences of spatial relationships, literalized in Yokohama’s affluent hills and its low-lying slums. The central conflict between inhabitants of these two spaces articulates this local topography into a global framework, in which con&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1863744"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1863744/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Lisa Zunshine deposited How Memories Become Literature in the group TM Literary Criticism</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1858170/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 12 Sep 2023 01:21:45 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Cognitive science can help literary scholars formulate specific questions to be answered by archival research. This essay takes as its starting point embedded mental states (that is, mental states about mental states) and their role in generating literary subjectivity. It then follows the transformation of embedded mental states throughout several&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1858170"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1858170/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Lisa Zunshine deposited How Memories Become Literature in the group TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1858169/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 12 Sep 2023 01:18:14 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Cognitive science can help literary scholars formulate specific questions to be answered by archival research. This essay takes as its starting point embedded mental states (that is, mental states about mental states) and their role in generating literary subjectivity. It then follows the transformation of embedded mental states throughout several&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1858169"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1858169/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Lisa Zunshine deposited Manipulating Metacognition in Witness for the Prosecution in the group TM Literary Criticism</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1857511/</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 06 Sep 2023 01:29:49 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This essay exemplifies a cognitive approach to literary and film studies, with particular emphasis on fictional reimagining of legal institutions. It draws on research of cognitive scientists who study metacognition—specifically, the difference between reflective and intuitive beliefs—to suggest that courtroom dramas, such as Billy Wilder’s Witne&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1857511"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1857511/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Lisa Zunshine deposited “Why Reasonable Children Don’t Think that Nutcracker is Alive or that the Mouse King is Real" in the group TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1856309/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 24 Aug 2023 01:27:12 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Zunshine’s essay draws on recent research in developmental psychology and cognitive evolutionary anthropology to examine emotional responses to supernatural events by the child and adult characters of E. T. A. Hoffmann’s The Nutcracker and the Mouse King (1816), as well as to revisit the traditional literary critical view of those responses, acc&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1856309"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1856309/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Alberto Ribas-Casasayas started the topic CfP ACLA seminar "Promises and Perils of the Psychedelic Renaissance" in the discussion TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-and-cultural-theory/forum/topic/cfp-acla-seminar-promises-and-perils-of-the-psychedelic-renaissance/</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 11 Aug 2023 17:35:50 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For distribution among scholars in: Comparative Literature, English, Cultural Studies, Communications, Spanish/Portuguese, Latin American Studies, Medical Humanities.</p>
<p>Ana Luengo (San Francisco State U) and Alberto Ribas (Santa Clara University) are organizing a seminar for the American Comparative Literature Association conference in Montréal,&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1854610"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/groups/literary-and-cultural-theory/forum/topic/cfp-acla-seminar-promises-and-perils-of-the-psychedelic-renaissance/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Wolfenheimer in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1854167/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 08 Aug 2023 01:20:28 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Makes use of the opportunity of the release of &#8220;Oppenheimer&#8221; to explore how Gene Wolfe uses his texts as factories into which guilt is inserted, but emerge ameliorated. Narrative serving the primary purpose of restructuring subconscious memory.</p>
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				<title>Monique Rodrigues Balbuena deposited The Shoah in the Sephardic World in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1852820/</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 26 Jul 2023 03:48:46 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Abstract of panel organized by the Sephardic Studies Discussion Group for the 2024 MLA Annual Convention.</p>
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				<title>Bradley J. Fest deposited Consider David Foster Wallace: Critical Essays edited by David Hering in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847391/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 2023 03:23:51 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Review of Consider David Foster Wallace.</p>
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				<title>Bradley J. Fest deposited Isn’t It a Beautiful Day? An Interview with J. Hillis Miller in the group TM Literary Criticism</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847390/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 2023 03:18:26 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This interview with esteemed literary critic J. Hillis Miller was conducted via Skype on July 17, 2013. Miller speaks about a number of issues important to his life and work. Providing a number of emblematic parables, Miller discusses his early career, his work on the poetry of William Carlos Williams, and his famous essay “The Critic as H&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1847390"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847390/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<guid isPermaLink="false">21f7d508e367a9adafbb932ffc469994</guid>
				<title>Bradley J. Fest deposited Isn’t It a Beautiful Day? An Interview with J. Hillis Miller in the group LLC Late-19th- and Early-20th-Century American</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847389/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 2023 03:15:26 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This interview with esteemed literary critic J. Hillis Miller was conducted via Skype on July 17, 2013. Miller speaks about a number of issues important to his life and work. Providing a number of emblematic parables, Miller discusses his early career, his work on the poetry of William Carlos Williams, and his famous essay “The Critic as H&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1847389"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847389/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Bradley J. Fest deposited Isn’t It a Beautiful Day? An Interview with J. Hillis Miller in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847386/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 2023 03:03:45 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This interview with esteemed literary critic J. Hillis Miller was conducted via Skype on July 17, 2013. Miller speaks about a number of issues important to his life and work. Providing a number of emblematic parables, Miller discusses his early career, his work on the poetry of William Carlos Williams, and his famous essay “The Critic as H&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1847386"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847386/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Bradley J. Fest deposited An Interview with Jonathan Arac in the group TM Literary Criticism</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847385/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 2023 02:57:59 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This interview with literary critic Jonathan Arac was conducted at the University of Pittsburgh on May 19, 2015. Arac, a member of the boundary 2 editorial collective since 1979, speaks at length about his life and work. Addressing the impact of theory on his career, he discusses how he came to be associated with the New Americanists, his project&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1847385"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847385/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Bradley J. Fest deposited An Interview with Jonathan Arac in the group LLC Late-19th- and Early-20th-Century American</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847384/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 2023 02:54:55 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This interview with literary critic Jonathan Arac was conducted at the University of Pittsburgh on May 19, 2015. Arac, a member of the boundary 2 editorial collective since 1979, speaks at length about his life and work. Addressing the impact of theory on his career, he discusses how he came to be associated with the New Americanists, his project&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1847384"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847384/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<guid isPermaLink="false">f3a0fdda2b6313c1dbd9e2397051240f</guid>
				<title>Bradley J. Fest deposited An Interview with Jonathan Arac in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847380/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 2023 02:43:03 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This interview with literary critic Jonathan Arac was conducted at the University of Pittsburgh on May 19, 2015. Arac, a member of the boundary 2 editorial collective since 1979, speaks at length about his life and work. Addressing the impact of theory on his career, he discusses how he came to be associated with the New Americanists, his project&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1847380"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847380/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<guid isPermaLink="false">44af3e7cec7c9abdbf9bee7525fc2440</guid>
				<title>Bradley J. Fest deposited “Then Out of the Rubble”: The Apocalypse in David Foster Wallace’s Early Fiction in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847378/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 2023 02:33:55 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Excerpt from first paragraph: In the emerging field of David Foster Wallace studies, nothing has been more widely cited in terms of understanding Wallace’s literary project than two texts that appeared in the 1993 issue of The Review of Contemporary Fiction. “E Unibus Pluram: Television and US Fiction” and a lengthy interview with Larry McCaf&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1847378"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847378/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Bradley J. Fest deposited The Inverted Nuke in the Garden: Archival Emergence and Anti-Eschatology in David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847376/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 2023 02:23:55 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This essay historically situates David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest as a transitional text between the first and second nuclear ages. Written in the immediate wake of the Cold War, Infinite Jest complexly develops the nuclear trope’s fabulously textual persistence despite the relative disappearance of the discourse of Mutually Assured Des&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1847376"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1847376/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Hania A.M. Nashef deposited J.M. Coetzee’s ‘Jesus’ Trilogy: A Search for Answers in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1842188/</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 22 Apr 2023 03:48:45 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The 2019 novel by the South African-Australian Nobel laureate, J M Coetzee, The Death of Jesus, is a third book in a sequence that includes Jesus in its title; like its predecessors it follows the lives of a recently constructed family in the dystopian Spanish-speaking towns of Novilla and Estrella. The surreal trilogy, which began with The&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1842188"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1842188/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Amel Abbady deposited “The past goes to sleep, and wakes up inside you”: Identity Crisis in Hassan Blasimʼs “The Nightmares of Carlos Fuentes” in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1841283/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 13 Apr 2023 04:32:01 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This article examines “The Nightmares of Carlos Fuentes,” the last of the fourteen stories that comprise Iraqi writer Hassan Blasimʼs collection The Corpse Exhibition. In “The Nightmares” Blasim is not concerned at all about depicting the reception of refugees in Europe. As evident in the title itself, what is central to the story is the psycholo&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1841283"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1841283/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Amel Abbady deposited Investigating the Postcolonial Grotesque in Martin McDonaghʼs A Very Very Very Dark Matter in the group TM Literary and Cultural Theory</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1841282/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 13 Apr 2023 04:28:33 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>McDonagh is arguably one of the most celebrated yet most controversial of contemporary Anglo-Irish playwrights. His plays have received mixed reviews from critics and audiences alike, mostly for featuring graphic violence and obscene dialogues. Even though comedy is mostly seen as an inferior genre compared to tragedy, McDonagh, among many&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1841282"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1841282/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Amel Abbady deposited Investigating the Postcolonial Grotesque in Martin McDonaghʼs A Very Very Very Dark Matter in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1841279/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 13 Apr 2023 04:21:22 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>McDonagh is arguably one of the most celebrated yet most controversial of contemporary Anglo-Irish playwrights. His plays have received mixed reviews from critics and audiences alike, mostly for featuring graphic violence and obscene dialogues. Even though comedy is mostly seen as an inferior genre compared to tragedy, McDonagh, among many&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1841279"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1841279/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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				<title>Amel Abbady deposited Homeland as a Site of Trauma in Selected Short Stories by Edwidge Danticat in the group CLCS 20th- and 21st-Century</title>
				<link>https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1841274/</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 13 Apr 2023 04:10:35 -0400</pubDate>

									<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The main objective of this article is to examine the representation of ʻhomelandʼ in three short stories by Caribbean-American writer Edwidge Danticat: “The Book of the Dead,” “Night Talkers,” and “The Gift.” All three stories represent Haitian migrants in the multi-cultural setting of the United States. A central theme that connects these stories&hellip;<span class="activity-read-more" id="activity-read-more-1841274"><a href="https://mla.hcommons.org/activity/p/1841274/" rel="nofollow ugc">[Read more]</a></span></p>
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