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Documents And The Malady Of Truth, Ronald E. Day
Documents And The Malady Of Truth, Ronald E. Day
Proceedings from the Document Academy
This article discusses documents, knowledge, and truth through a conceptual examination and through an examination of Flaubert's 19th century novel Madame Bovary. It argues that the main characters of Madame Bovary deceive themselves by believing that the contents of the fictional and medical texts they read convey truth. In contrast, the article argues that modern knowledge is constituted by documentary evidence operating in knowledge networks and processes where the result of such operations is what can be claimed to be true about the world through such processes. The representational malady that Madame and Doctor Bovary suffer in the novel was …
Western Wall, Jerusalem, Judi Yitti Koval
Western Wall, Jerusalem, Judi Yitti Koval
The John Carroll Review
No abstract provided.
The Old Man, Madeleine Polcyn
Migraine During A Late Night Drive, Julia Kashuba
Migraine During A Late Night Drive, Julia Kashuba
The John Carroll Review
No abstract provided.
The Kitchen Table, Emily Elvoid
Unexpecting, Mara Bahmer
Peeling, Jessica Disalvatore
Two Or Three Days Ago, Marcie Blandford
Optimal View, Andy Penk
Brown Bear, Ashley Bernett
Bodies In Transit: Women, War, And Violence In Select Fiction From Nepal, Lakhipriya Gogoi
Bodies In Transit: Women, War, And Violence In Select Fiction From Nepal, Lakhipriya Gogoi
Journal of International Women's Studies
The figures of women in conflict zones have been presented in South Asian literature chiefly as torn and battered bodies/souls, usually carrying an irremediable suffering and sense of loss that they bear as wives, mothers, and daughters while their male compatriots participate in the zone of war. The twentieth century surge in identity movements and political conflicts in South Asia, however, offers us new figures of women as “warriors” or direct participants in the zones of violence. The usurpation of such new bodies, on the one hand, defies the hegemonic feminization of women’s bodies as caregivers, and on the other …
Broken Reflection, Jenny Carpenter
Broken Reflection, Jenny Carpenter
AWE (A Woman’s Experience)
“B, grab me my napkin, why don’t you,” Jim says, leaning back into the plush, bloodred chair at Spanky’s. Spanky’s is hardly a dinner date—I mean, it’s a sandwich place.
But it’s what Jim wants. And what he wants, he gets.
Still, I hesitate, thinking about telling him to just snatch it up off the ground himself. I’m not his slave. The napkin’s right in front of him.
Zero Hunger, Caroline Bass
Sickly Sweet, Lara Rudman
Fireplace, Caroline Bass
Fuego, Annie Schulz
The Woodpile, Caroline Bass
Up In Smoke, Shi Pope
Snow, Kayla Burrell
Fabric Memories, Emma Carruth
Satellite Watchdog, Alissa Xiao
Cygnet Creek Bridge (Spanning Furman University Place Of Peace Stream), Isaiah Ives
Cygnet Creek Bridge (Spanning Furman University Place Of Peace Stream), Isaiah Ives
The Echo
No abstract provided.
Halcyon Years, Laura Dame
Red & Rust, Alexander Rainier
Body And Soul, Emma Carruth
Changing Of The Guard, Adare Taylor
•, Laura Dame
The Flowers Are Beautiful, Alysha Matthews
Attention Pt. 3, Anne Heaton Sanders
At Work, Caroline Bass