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| Literature Grad: All Publications (in the database)List most recent publications in the database. :chronological alphabetical combined listing:%% Beaver, Blake @article{fds375523, Author = {Beaver, BK}, Title = {The Kardashians, Live! Fabricating Liveness in the Sex-Tape-Derived Reality Series}, Journal = {Television and New Media}, Year = {2024}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15274764231221764}, Abstract = {This article explores the fabrication of liveness, understood as a category of affective urgency and narrative motivation, in two reality series derived from a sex tape scandal: Keeping Up with the Kardashians and The Kardashians. The reality programs narratively incorporate Kim’s live TV appearances to compensate for the sex tape intertext’s incomplete liveness. Consequently, the Kardashian series suggest that live TV might imbue other media genres, like reality TV and sex tapes, with the liveness those genres only partially replicate. At the same time, the Kardashian series indicate a deficiency in live TV’s intertextual influence. The two series necessitate artificial liveness, produced through esthetic techniques, and simulated liveness, manufactured from imitations of live TV, to bolster the liveness of Kim’s live TV appearances. The Kardashians’s intertext, Saturday Night Live, clarifies this complication in live TV’s intertextual impact by parodying live TV’s decline as the dominant medium for liveness.}, Doi = {10.1177/15274764231221764}, Key = {fds375523} } @article{fds373057, Author = {Beaver, B}, Title = {Howard L. Kaye, Freud as a Social and Cultural Theorist: On Human Nature and the Civilizing Process}, Journal = {Psychoanalysis and History}, Volume = {24}, Number = {1}, Pages = {114-118}, Publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, Year = {2022}, Key = {fds373057} } @article{fds349317, Author = {Beaver, B}, Title = {Feel-Sad TV: Sadness Pornography in Contemporary Serials}, Journal = {disClosure}, Volume = {28}, Pages = {1-12}, Editor = {Hardesty, R and Hechler, A}, Year = {2019}, Month = {December}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.13023/disclosure.28.01}, Abstract = {This article develops a theory of sadness pornographies in contemporary feel-sad television. Under the sad porn category, the essay explores a key sub-genre in contemporary serial dramas: trauma porn. The article is anchored in an affective analysis of two contemporary serials: Amazon's Transparent and NBC's This Is Us, both of which center multigenerational, familial trauma. Through a combined Berlantian and Spinozist optic, the essay attends to various episodes from the two serials to illuminate the phenomenon of trauma porn in current feel-sad media. In this reading, the essay considers how Spinoza's understandings of the temporality of affect relate to the particular temporalities of traumatic TV in its streaming and broadcast formats. In the analytic process, the article constructs a speculative spectator, who craves feel-sad media to affectively self-reproduce - to emotionally endure - in the face of current workspaces' managed non-catharsis. The essay concludes with a theory of sad-joy, framed by Spinoza's affective schema, to dramatize a singularly contemporary mode of purgation, one which succeeds classical and modern theories of cathartic tragedy.}, Doi = {10.13023/disclosure.28.01}, Key = {fds349317} } %% Bhattarai, Pratistha @article{fds368027, Author = {Bhattarai, P}, Title = {Algorithmic Value: Cultural Encoding, Textuality, and the Myth of Source Code.}, Journal = {Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience}, Volume = {3}, Number = {1}, Pages = {1-1}, Year = {2017}, Key = {fds368027} } %% Blalock, Corinne @article{fds315757, Author = {Blalock, C}, Title = {Neoliberalism and the Crisis of Legal Theory}, Journal = {Law and Contemporary Problems}, Volume = {77}, Number = {4}, Pages = {71-103}, Year = {2015}, ISSN = {1945-2322}, url = {http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4708&context=lcp}, Key = {fds315757} } %% Cao, Xuenan @article{fds315870, Author = {Cao, X}, Title = {Village Worlds: Yan Lianke’s Villages and Matters of Life}, Journal = {Journal of Language, Literature and Culture}, Year = {2016}, Month = {May}, ISSN = {2051-2864}, Key = {fds315870} } @article{fds315871, Author = {Cao, X}, Title = {Mythorealism and Enchanted Time: Yan Lianke’s Explosion Chronicles}, Journal = {Frontiers of Literary Studies in China}, Volume = {10}, Number = {1}, Pages = {103-112}, Publisher = {Brill Academic Publishers}, Year = {2016}, ISSN = {1673-7423}, Key = {fds315871} } @article{fds315872, Author = {CAO}, Title = {Book Review: Verses Going Viral by Heather Inwood}, Journal = {Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, and Reviews.}, Volume = {37}, Year = {2015}, Month = {December}, Abstract = {"Why is contemporary poetry so lonely" (4) in a time of commercialization and mass media? Along with such poignancy is a paradoxical need to safeguard the elite literary tradition of poetry through blatant collusions with the market and mass media. In a nation with a long tradition in and cultural memory tethered to poetry, contemporary poetry in China has supposedly failed in its dual mission of history--- writing and nation---building, and has thereby lost the aura of the art.h}, Key = {fds315872} } %% Carolyn, Laubender @article{fds316132, Author = {Laubender, C}, Title = {Gut Response: A Review of Elizabeth A. Wilson’s Gut Feminism}, Journal = {Journal of International Women’s Studies, Vol 17.1 (2016): 131-135}, Year = {2016}, Month = {June}, Key = {fds316132} } %% Collier, Madeleine @article{fds370951, Author = {Collier, M}, Title = {Black box universe: the mind-game phenomenon, the hacker film, and the new millennium}, Journal = {New Review of Film and Television Studies}, Volume = {21}, Number = {3}, Pages = {544-566}, Publisher = {Informa UK Limited}, Year = {2023}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17400309.2023.2207425}, Abstract = {It is the beginning of the new millennium. Globalization is picking up the pace, and Marxist media theorists warn about affective and ‘immaterial’ modes of extraction, as well as the rise of the attention economy. It is within this web of post-Fordist anxieties and chameleonic, flexible mechanisms of control that Thomas Elsaesser first charts the rise of the mind-game phenomenon, in his 2009 article ‘The Mind-Game Film’. Elsaesser and his successors perceptively trace the mind-game film back to a range of global conditions and technological innovations which marked the passage from the twentieth to twenty-first centuries, from interactive VCR and DVD technology to confrontations with post-colonial Others. However, little-to-no mind-game scholarship thus far has centered the rise of Web 2.0 and the concurrent privatization of the Internet; furthermore, with the obvious exception of the Matrix trilogy, the mind-bending hacker films of the 1980s and 1990s (e.g. WarGames, Sneakers, The Net) have been largely overlooked as mind-game and mind-game-adjacent films. Accordingly, this paper examines whether and how the hacker film might be folded into the broader field of mind-game scholarship.}, Doi = {10.1080/17400309.2023.2207425}, Key = {fds370951} } %% Crais, Benjamin @article{fds372460, Author = {Crais, B}, Title = {Cultivating History: Sergei Eisenstein’s The General Line and the Cinema of Agrarian Transition}, Journal = {Discourse}, Volume = {45}, Number = {1-2}, Pages = {138-169}, Publisher = {Wayne State University Press}, Year = {2023}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dis.2023.a907670}, Doi = {10.1353/dis.2023.a907670}, Key = {fds372460} } @article{fds369979, Author = {Crais, B}, Title = {The Traveller—On Robert Kramer}, Publisher = {Sidecar (New Left Review)}, Year = {2023}, Key = {fds369979} } @article{fds369980, Author = {Crais, B}, Title = {Review of Cured Quail Volume II.}, Journal = {Marx & Philosophy Review of Books}, Year = {2021}, Key = {fds369980} } @article{fds369981, Author = {Crais, B}, Title = {The Geography of Crisis. Review of Phil A. Neel’s Hinterland: America’s New Landscape of Class and Conflict.}, Journal = {Polygraph: An International Journal of Culture and Politics}, Number = {28}, Pages = {203-213}, Year = {2020}, Key = {fds369981} } %% Dahiya, Annu @article{fds338077, Author = {Dahiya, A}, Title = {The Container Problem: Irigaray, Primordial Wombs, and the Origins of Life}, Booktitle = {A Sharing of Thought and Speech: Scholarship on or Inspired by the Work of Luce Irigaray}, Editor = {Crapo, R and Russell, Y and Sharp, B}, Year = {2019}, Month = {July}, Key = {fds338077} } @article{fds338078, Author = {Dahiya, A}, Title = {Before the Cell, there was Virus: Rethinking the Concept of Parasite and Contagion through Contemporary Research in Evolutionary Virology}, Booktitle = {Transforming Contagion Risky Contacts Among Bodies, Disciplines, and Nations}, Year = {2018}, Month = {July}, ISBN = {0813589584}, Abstract = {Moving from viruses, vaccines, and copycat murder to gay panics, xenophobia, and psychopaths, Transforming Contagion energetically fuses critical humanities and social science perspectives into a boundary-smashing interdisciplinary ...}, Key = {fds338078} } @article{fds338079, Author = {Dahiya, A}, Title = {Gender Violence in HIV Prevention Efforts: A Case Study}, Journal = {Rutgers Journal of Bioethics}, Volume = {1}, Number = {2}, Pages = {33-36}, Year = {2010}, Key = {fds338079} } %% Fischer, Julien @article{fds359857, Author = {Fischer, JE}, Title = {Jamieson Webster, Conversion Disorder: Listening to the Body in Psychoanalysis, (New York: Columbia University Press, 2019, 303 pp.); reviewed by Julien E. Fischer}, Journal = {Psychoanalysis and History}, Volume = {24}, Number = {1}, Pages = {forthcoming-forthcoming}, Publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, Year = {2022}, Month = {April}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/pah.2022.0414}, Doi = {10.3366/pah.2022.0414}, Key = {fds359857} } @article{fds359464, Author = {Fischer, JE}, Title = {The Promise of Transgender Childhood}, Journal = {Glq: a Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies}, Volume = {26}, Number = {2}, Pages = {349-351}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2020}, Month = {April}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10642684-8141914}, Doi = {10.1215/10642684-8141914}, Key = {fds359464} } @article{fds359465, Author = {Fischer, JE}, Title = {Initiation Rites: “Thinking Sex” and the Feminist Theory Canon}, Journal = {Feminist Formations}, Volume = {32}, Number = {1}, Pages = {29-48}, Publisher = {Project Muse}, Year = {2020}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ff.2020.0003}, Doi = {10.1353/ff.2020.0003}, Key = {fds359465} } %% Fuleihan, Zeena Yasmine @article{fds368414, Author = {Fuleihan, ZY}, Title = {Arab American Women: Representation and Refusal}, Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women's Studies}, Volume = {18}, Number = {3}, Pages = {414-418}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2022}, Month = {November}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/15525864-10022174}, Doi = {10.1215/15525864-10022174}, Key = {fds368414} } @article{fds367743, Author = {Fuleihan, ZY}, Title = {The Fancy Girl Episteme: Tracking the Legacy of Master-Slave Rape in the Evolution of the Tragic Mulatto Trope}, Journal = {The Comparatist}, Volume = {46}, Number = {1}, Pages = {124-133}, Publisher = {Project MUSE}, Year = {2022}, Month = {October}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/com.2022.0007}, Doi = {10.1353/com.2022.0007}, Key = {fds367743} } %% Gaffney, Michael @article{fds339376, Author = {Gaffney, M}, Title = {The Ice Age and Us: Imagining Geohistory in Kim Stanley Robinson's Shaman}, Journal = {Science Fiction Studies}, Volume = {45}, Number = {3}, Pages = {469-483}, Publisher = {SF-TH}, Year = {2018}, Month = {November}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5621/sciefictstud.45.3.0469}, Abstract = {© 2018 S F - T H Inc. All rights reserved. This essay examines how Kim Stanley Robinson's Shaman (2014) depicts the deep history of both humans and the Earth. Centered around humans living 32,000 years ago during the last ice age, it contributes to the genre of prehistoric fiction as well as, less obviously, climate fiction. As prehistoric fiction, it foregrounds the continuity of human identity across history, particularly our impulses toward art-making and science, and thereby challenges our sense of separation from the deep past. At the same time, Robinson's novel may also be understood as climate fiction. Typically, climate fiction is associated with contemporary global warming, but this article approaches the genre in terms of its tendency to envision environments historically, a capacity referred to here as the "geohistorical imagination." While Shaman shares this imagination with other climate fictions, it differs remarkably from most ice-age narratives because it describes the slow pace of glaciation and the persistence of daily life, rather than the apocalypse. Drawing out the consequences of this figuration of geohistory, this essay argues in conclusion that Shaman enables us to think historically about global warming and the Anthropocene.}, Doi = {10.5621/sciefictstud.45.3.0469}, Key = {fds339376} } @article{fds318250, Author = {Gaffney, M}, Title = {Review of 'Absolute Recoil' by Slavoj Žižek}, Journal = {Polygraph: an International Journal of Culture and Politics}, Volume = {25}, Pages = {181-188}, Year = {2016}, Month = {November}, Key = {fds318250} } @article{fds318249, Author = {Gaffney, M}, Title = {Review of 'The Intimacies of Four Continents' by Lisa Lowe}, Journal = {Journal of American Studies}, Volume = {50}, Number = {4}, Pages = {E71-E71}, Year = {2016}, Month = {October}, Key = {fds318249} } %% Gonzalez, Jaime @article{fds342060, Author = {Soule, J and Issacharoff, J and Gonzalez, J}, Title = {Introduction, Polygraph 27: Neoliberalism and Social Reproduction}, Journal = {Polygraph: an International Journal of Culture and Politics}, Number = {27}, Pages = {7-17}, Year = {2019}, Month = {February}, Key = {fds342060} } %% Greenspan, Rachel E @article{fds315912, Author = {Greenspan, R}, Title = {“I’ll Have What She’s Having”: Fake Orgasm, Affectation, and Other S(t)imulations}, Journal = {The Comparatist}, Volume = {39}, Number = {1}, Pages = {116-134}, Year = {2015}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/com.2015.0012}, Doi = {10.1353/com.2015.0012}, Key = {fds315912} } %% Gregory, Chase @article{fds315874, Author = {Gregory, C}, Title = {“'That Infinite Sphere': Paradox, Paralepsis, and Parody in Les guérillères.”}, Journal = {Feminist Spaces}, Volume = {2}, Number = {1}, Pages = {19-35}, Publisher = {issuu}, Editor = {Hammock, B}, Year = {2016}, Month = {January}, url = {https://issuu.com/feministspacesjournal/docs/feministspaces_2.1/1}, Key = {fds315874} } @misc{fds315873, Author = {Gregory, C}, Title = {“No Leeway"}, Journal = {Duke Women’S Studies Newsletter}, Pages = {12-12}, Year = {2015}, Month = {August}, url = {http://womenstudies.duke.edu/uploads/media_items/summer-2015-newsletter-1.original.pdf}, Key = {fds315873} } @article{fds315875, Author = {Gregory, C}, Title = {In the Gutter: Comix theory}, Journal = {Studies in Comics}, Volume = {3}, Number = {1}, Pages = {107-128}, Publisher = {Intellect}, Year = {2012}, Month = {August}, ISSN = {2040-3232}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/stic.3.1.107_1}, Doi = {10.1386/stic.3.1.107_1}, Key = {fds315875} } %% Huber, Nick @article{fds335029, Author = {Huber, N}, Title = {Tom McCarthy, Karl Marx, and the Money on the Books}, Journal = {Open Library of Humanities}, Volume = {3}, Number = {2}, Publisher = {Open Library of the Humanities}, Year = {2017}, Month = {November}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.16995/olh.237}, Doi = {10.16995/olh.237}, Key = {fds335029} } %% Jaramillo, Laura @book{fds333839, Author = {Jaramillo, L}, Title = {Material Girl}, Pages = {92 pages}, Publisher = {Subpress}, Year = {2012}, ISBN = {1930068522}, Abstract = {' If the thing is that we have to learn how both to inhabit and escape, adore and destroy—well, now I feel sure that this is the thing, because this is what Laura Jaramillo teaches."—Fred Moten "Negative Ecstasy.}, Key = {fds333839} } %% Karp, Melissa @article{fds370927, Author = {Karp, M}, Title = {“Let me be dust”: Memory beyond testimony in Gwangju, South Korea}, Journal = {Memory Studies}, Volume = {16}, Number = {3}, Pages = {546-560}, Publisher = {SAGE Publications}, Year = {2023}, Month = {June}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17506980231162329}, Abstract = {Archives of the 5·18 Gwangju People’s Uprising—a 1980 pro-democracy protest in South Korea—entered UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register in 2011. UNESCO’s inclusion provided international recognition for the Uprising after censorship under the Chun Doo-hwan regime; however, the narrative clarity presented through photographs, documents, and testimony in the museum now defines and limits memorialization. By contrast, Ch’oe Yun’s 1988 novella There a Petal Silently Falls imagines what lies beyond archives. With its silent protagonist and fragmented, sometimes illegible prose, Petal interrogates the coherence of memory when stripped of testimony. Reading Petal and the Archives as distinct memory sites, this article questions how memory projects privilege evidentiary archives, which might perpetuate the very patterns of violence such projects seek to uncover. As human rights ideologies become increasingly predominant, Ch’oe’s novella reasserts not only that the agony of memory can exceed the intelligibility of the archive, but that it must.}, Doi = {10.1177/17506980231162329}, Key = {fds370927} } %% Morris Levine, R @article{fds376793, Author = {Levine, RM}, Title = {Freely Espousing: James Schuyler, Surveillance Poetry, and the Queer Otic}, Journal = {Diacritics}, Volume = {51}, Number = {1}, Pages = {32-48}, Publisher = {Project MUSE}, Year = {2023}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dia.2023.a923442}, Abstract = {<jats:p xml:lang="en"> Abstract: Amidst the “lavender scare” of the Cold War, James Schuyler, “the great queer voice of the New York School,” subverted the state’s auditory surveillance of queer life. Refunctionalizing its tools of espionage as poetic tactics, Schuyler eavesdrops on errant conversations (the espoused) and joining (espousing) them in paratactic assembly. In so doing, Schuyler expands José Esteban Muñoz’s “queer optic,” the utopian capacity to see beauty amidst ruins, beyond the visual into a queer otic that drags into being a world of freer espousal. I survey the aural surveillance of mid-century queer life before tracing Schuyler’s détournement of bugging, wiretapping, and overhearing in his 1969 Freely Espousing . In turn, I uncover the queer political commitments lurking beneath Schuyler’s classification as a pastoral lyricist concerned only with “leaves and flowers and weather.”</jats:p>}, Doi = {10.1353/dia.2023.a923442}, Key = {fds376793} } %% Pujol Leon, Ernest @article{fds365950, Author = {Pujol Leon and E}, Title = {Review of Werner Bonefeld and Chris O'Kane (eds). Adorno and Marx: Negative Dialectics and the Critique of Political Economy}, Journal = {Marx & Philosophy Review of Books}, Year = {2022}, Month = {September}, Key = {fds365950} } %% Ragin, Renee @article{fds339238, Author = {Ragin, R}, Title = {Feminism and Avant-Garde Aesthetics in the Levantine Novel, by Kifah Hanna}, Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies}, Volume = {15}, Number = {1}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2019}, Month = {March}, Key = {fds339238} } @article{fds339239, Author = {Ragin, R}, Title = {Film Review: L’Insulte (The Insult)}, Journal = {International Journal of Genocide Studies and Prevention}, Volume = {12}, Number = {2}, Pages = {203-205}, Year = {2018}, Month = {October}, Key = {fds339239} } %% Rizki, Cole @article{fds343635, Author = {Rizki, C}, Title = {Latin/x American Trans Studies}, Journal = {Tsq: Transgender Studies Quarterly}, Volume = {6}, Number = {2}, Pages = {145-155}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2019}, Month = {May}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/23289252-7348426}, Doi = {10.1215/23289252-7348426}, Key = {fds343635} } @misc{fds347411, Title = {Trans Studies en las Américas}, Journal = {Tsq: Transgender Studies Quarterly}, Volume = {6}, Number = {2}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Editor = {Garriga-López, CS and Lopes, D and Rizki, C and Rodríguez, JM}, Year = {2019}, Month = {May}, Key = {fds347411} } @article{fds347412, Author = {Rizki, C}, Title = {Hemispheric Translations}, Journal = {Glq: a Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies}, Volume = {25}, Number = {1}, Pages = {199-201}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2019}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10642684-7275688}, Doi = {10.1215/10642684-7275688}, Key = {fds347412} } %% Sjol, Jordan @article{fds363179, Author = {Sjol, J}, Title = {Capturing Finance: Arbitrage and Social Domination}, Journal = {Journal of Cultural Economy}, Volume = {15}, Number = {3}, Pages = {383-386}, Publisher = {Informa UK Limited}, Year = {2022}, Month = {May}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17530350.2022.2048880}, Doi = {10.1080/17530350.2022.2048880}, Key = {fds363179} } @article{fds363180, Author = {Sjol, J}, Title = {Contingency and Mysticism from Economics to Finance: Knight, Ayache, DeLillo}, Journal = {Theory, Culture and Society}, Volume = {39}, Number = {1}, Pages = {61-80}, Year = {2022}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02632764211030547}, Abstract = {The recent history of finance has been widely portrayed, by both critics and practitioners, as a story about risk. As pointed out by Mary Poovey, focusing on risk entails forgetting uncertainty. In this paper, I argue forgetting uncertainty leads to an inability to distinguish between rational and mystical modes of financial thinking. Using literary-theoretical analysis, I read three exemplary texts across each other: Frank Knight’s seminal 1921 treatise, Risk, Uncertainty, and Profit, which helped justify the modern corporate financial form; Elie Ayache’s 2010 The Blank Swan, a philosophical account of derivatives trading that exemplifies more recent developments in finance; and Don DeLillo’s 2013 Cosmopolis, a novel that remediates the structures of thought implied by the other texts’ philosophical commitments. This textual nexus allows me to explicate the characteristic form of financial mysticism, rendering it visible against claims that derivatives and financial theory have fully rationalized finance.}, Doi = {10.1177/02632764211030547}, Key = {fds363180} } %% Sockol, Mike @misc{fds366394, Author = {Sockol, M}, Title = {Cancelling Wilderness}, Journal = {F News}, Publisher = {F News}, Editor = {Gallant, L}, Year = {2020}, Month = {February}, Key = {fds366394} } @article{fds366395, Author = {Sockol, M}, Title = {Old Growth Forest Distribution Patterns of Alliaria petiolata: soil pH and invasive plant populations at Green Oaks Biological Field Station}, Journal = {McNair Scholars Research Journal}, Volume = {Vol. 312}, Publisher = {Eastern Michigan University Library}, Editor = {Crider, J}, Year = {2017}, Month = {November}, Abstract = {This paper examines the population densities and soil pH of the invasive garlic mustard plant in old growth forests in western Illinois.}, Key = {fds366395} } %% Soule, Jake @article{fds341730, Author = {Soule, J and Issacharoff, J and Gonzalez, J}, Title = {Introduction, Polygraph 27: Neoliberalism and Social Reproduction}, Journal = {Polygraph: an International Journal of Culture and Politics}, Number = {27}, Pages = {7-17}, Year = {2019}, Month = {February}, Key = {fds341730} } %% Stadler, John @article{fds332211, Author = {Stadler, JP and Greenspan, RE}, Title = {Introduction to Pleasure and Suspicion}, Journal = {Polygraph: an international journal of culture and politics}, Volume = {26}, Number = {1}, Pages = {1-13}, Editor = {Stadler, J and Greenspan, RE}, Year = {2017}, Month = {December}, Key = {fds332211} } @article{fds332856, Author = {Stadler, JP}, Title = {Dire Straights: The Indeterminacy of Sexual Identity in Gay-for-Pay Pornography}, Journal = {Jump Cut}, Volume = {No. 55}, Number = {1}, Year = {2013}, Key = {fds332856} } %% Swacha, Michael G. @article{fds337985, Author = {Swacha, M}, Title = {Against Teleologism: Notes on Reason, Madness, and Sovereignty from Socrates to the Foucault/Derrida Debate}, Journal = {Diacritics}, Volume = {44}, Number = {4}, Pages = {66-88}, Year = {2016}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dia.2016.0020}, Doi = {10.1353/dia.2016.0020}, Key = {fds337985} } @misc{fds318255, Author = {Swacha, M}, Title = {Comparing Structures of Knowledge}, Journal = {Acla Report on the State of the Discipline 2014 2015}, Editor = {Heise et al, U}, Year = {2015}, Month = {June}, Key = {fds318255} } @article{fds318256, Author = {Swacha, M}, Title = {Should We Justify the Humanities? A Round Table with David Damrosch, Lois Zamora, and Marianne Hirsch}, Journal = {Comparative Literature Studies}, Volume = {51}, Number = {4}, Pages = {587-602}, Year = {2014}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/complitstudies.51.4.0587}, Doi = {10.5325/complitstudies.51.4.0587}, Key = {fds318256} } | |
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