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Limitrophy in contemporary literatures in English European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-25 Laura Mª Lojo Rodríguez, Roberto Del Valle Alcalá
Published in European Journal of English Studies (Vol. 27, No. 3, 2023)
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Acoustic limitrophies, or why Roald Dahl’s work sounds more serious than it seems European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-25 Jorge Sacido-Romero
The visual dimension of Roald Dahl's work is conspicuous and well known. However, his texts also articulate the author’s life-long interest in sound(s), in the aural or acoustic. The present articl...
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Hospitality and liminality in the time of the Anthropocene: Jenn Ashworth’s Fell European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-25 Paul March-Russell
Jenn Ashworth’s Fell (2016) is written as a response to the legend of Baucis and Philemon, an elderly couple who take in a mysterious stranger. Ashworth’s novel shifts between 1963, when Netty and ...
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Reading transformations: from David Garnett’s Lady into Fox (1922) to Sarah Hall’s “Mrs Fox” (2013) European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-25 Ann-Sofie Lönngren
This article compares the short story “Mrs Fox” by Sarah Hall (3013) with David Garnett’s novel Lady into Fox (1922). Albeit different in some regards, these stories both center a human-animal tran...
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Root identity–relation identity in Inga Simpson’s Understory: a life with trees European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-25 Bárbara Arizti
Simpson’s memoir Understory: A Life with Trees illustrates significant changes in life writing that align it with transmodernity and its turn to the relational. They become apparent when reading Un...
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The mind is all the animals it has attended: limitrophy and porous borders in the poetry of Robert Bringhurst European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-25 Leonor María Martínez Serrano
As an ecopoet intellectually alert to the conundrums posed by the Anthropocene, Canadian poet-philosopher Robert Bringhurst explores in his work the entanglements of the perceiving subject and the ...
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Deconstructing human-canine relations in Richard Adams’s The Plague Dogs European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-25 Lorraine Kerslake
This essay explores the complex subject of human-animal relations and the animal question through Richard Adams’s The Plague Dogs (1977), written parallel to the birth of the animal liberation move...
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Human-nonhuman boundaries and inter-creatural empathy in Klara and the Sun, Fifteen Dogs, the Wonder that Was Ours and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-25 Zsófia Novák
Engaging with issues of categorisation, human supremacy, and (the lack of) empathy, in this article I read Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968), Kazuo Ishiguro’s Klara and t...
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Interstitial space and the Spiritualist séance: psychical geography, telephonic imaginary and social possibility in 1870s Britain European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 John M. Andrick
As the key site in extending the territoriology of Victorian Spiritualism, the domestic séance harboured multiple interstices or interstitial spaces, most notably evident in the spaces in-between s...
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Spheres within spheres: nineteenth-century interstitial spaces and Eleanor Catton’s The Luminaries (2013) European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Frederik Van Dam, Chris Louttit
The introductory essay to this special issue on Nineteenth-Century Interstitial Spaces begins by noting the period’s pertinence for scholars exploring interstitiality, which as a concept may have e...
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Non-places of memory: interstitiality and the social function of space in Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights (1847) and Ellen Wood’s Danesbury House (1860) European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Elisavet Ioannidou
Challenging the well-established assumption that memory constitutes a determinant of place, this article argues that memory of traumatic events can also turn place into non-place. The characteristi...
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Virtual environments in the nineteenth century: the spectacle of old London European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Patricia Smyth
This article considers the appeal of immersive recreations of old London for nineteenth-century audiences. When discussed by scholars now, they are most often presented as conduits of official ideo...
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Estrangement at the church door: Silas Marner and the projection of new English spaces European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Delphine Gatehouse
The Act for the Commutation of Tithes, long-awaited and finally passed in 1836, receives almost no critical attention today. Thanks to the relative success with which commutation handled a taxing s...
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Caryl Phillips's interstitial poetics European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Giovanna Buonanno
The “spatial turn” in literary studies has challenged the perception that time is the fundamental organising principle of fiction and has drawn attention to the ways in which writers create literar...
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Powered modernity, contested space: literary modernism and the London tram European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Jason Finch
A literary history of London’s tramways spans the period between late-Victorian and High Modernism, encompassing naturalist fiction, reportage, creative non-fiction, modernist poetry, and the psych...
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The space of the glazed window in nineteenth-century London European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Christopher Ferguson
During the nineteenth century, the widespread adoption of clear-glass windows facilitated the development of a new space of urban experience. The area immediately adjacent to the inside or outside ...
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Earthly intermundia: office space in the works of Charles Dickens European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Daniel Jenkin-Smith
Charles Dickens’s literary preoccupation with bureaucracy reflects its ascendant, but often contradictory, position in Victorian society. Exclusive, disordered, and in parts archaic – but at the sa...
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A Greeting of the Spirit: Selected Poetry of John Keats with Commentaries European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-19 Alessandro Gallenzi
Published in European Journal of English Studies (Vol. 27, No. 2, 2023)
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Global Instapoetry European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-02 JuEunhae Knox, James Mackay, Anna Nacher
ABSTRACT Instagram started in San Francisco, yet it has been clear that its usage has spread worldwide. The influence of this global outreach is apparent not only in the platform’s general use, however, but in unique content trends as well. In particular, there is Instapoetry, the movement of minimalist poetry that has taken Instagram and the rest of the world by storm since 2018. Although Instapoetry
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Editorial: #Instapoetry’s vibrancy and ambivalence European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-02 Greta Olson
Published in European Journal of English Studies (Vol. 27, No. 1, 2023)
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#Instapoetry in India: the aesthetic of the digital vernacular European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-02 Shweta Khilnani
ABSTRACT This article will study the evolution of Instapoetry within the Indian digital sphere and trace its trajectory of growth and development. It will take a close look at how local and historical issues find expression in a global, digital mediascape through this emerging body of writing. The article further argues that Indian Instapoetry is characterised by a peculiar aesthetic shaped by a combination
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The media ecologies of Norwegian instapoet Trygve Skaug: tracing the post-digital circulation process of (insta)poetry through participatory-made Instagram archives European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-02 Camilla Holm Soelseth
ABSTRACT The name instapoetry – or Instagram poetry – suggests a specific attachment of poetry to Instagram. But how bound is instapoetry to Instagram? This article uncovers the relationship between instapoetry and Instagram by analysing the participatory-made exhibits of Norwegian instapoet Trygve Skaug. By investigating the various media instantiations of Skaug’s poetry, the article discusses how
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The “applied poetics” of Instagram: the Greek Instapoetry landscape European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-02 Danai Tselenti
ABSTRACT This study maps the Greek Instapoetry landscape by exploring a) the central formats and themes through which Greek Instapoetry becomes communicated, the most common hashtag sequences used and the predominant types of elicited responses, as well as b) the basic perceptions and experiences of Instapoetry practitioners. Findings evidenced how multiple individual forms of labour are involved in
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“Let Black Girls Be”: The (Insta)poetry of Upile Chisala and its resistance to coloniality of being European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-02 Bella Boqo
ABSTRACT The production and circulation of poetry on social media has gained critical attention over the past decade. Known popularly as Instapoetry, this digital literary phenomenon has been celebrated in the Global North for increased printed poetry sales and changing readership patterns. Little has been written about Instapoetry from the Global South despite its popularity amongst black women readers
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“Lo vamos a conseguir”: Instapoetry as a vehicle for feminist movements in the contemporary Spanish context European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-02 Louise Evans
ABSTRACT In this addition to the European Journal of English Studies special issue, the author reflects on the employment of social media application Instagram by contemporary poets in peninsular Spain as a tool for projecting societal concerns specifically related to feminism and social equality movements, proliferated by technological affordances such as the graphological hashtag (#). By analysing
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#indigenousauthor: locating Tenille Campbell’s erotic poetry, photography, and community-based arts beyond social media European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-02 Tanja Grubnic
ABSTRACT Guided by a desire-centred framework, this article explores how Tenille Campbell (Dene/Métis) uses Instagram as a space for contemporary muiltimedia artistic practice. Her poetry, photography, and other creative endeavours have presented meaningful opportunities for community-building and identity-affirmation as a force specifically for Indigenous resurgence across national, tribal, and geographical
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Performing Persian poetics on Instagram: an interview with @barkhi_az_honarmandan European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-07-02 Yasamin Rezai
ABSTRACT Uncensored, unlike many other social media platforms in Iran, Instagram has become the most popular social media platform among Iranians, providing a space for creative expression including the creation of Instapoetry. Here I offer an interview with the group behind the @barkhi_az_honarmandan account, an Instagram account run by anonymous admins that produces digital poetry. Since Iran and
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The Nutmeg’s curse: parables for a planet in crisis European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-15 Sharmila Narayana
Published in European Journal of English Studies (Vol. 27, No. 2, 2023)
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Metaphors of confinement: the prison in fact, fiction, and fantasy European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-02-15 Rivkah Zim
Published in European Journal of English Studies (Vol. 27, No. 2, 2023)
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The relevance of virality to the present European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Greta Olson
Published in European Journal of English Studies (Vol. 26, No. 3, 2022)
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Slowing down earlier in the pandemic went Well – so why speed back up? European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Shari Boodts, Frederik Van Dam
Published in European Journal of English Studies (Vol. 26, No. 3, 2022)
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Going viral: chronotopes of disaster in film and media European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Sotirios Bampatzimopoulos, Geli Mademli
Published in European Journal of English Studies (Vol. 26, No. 3, 2022)
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Capitalism and the politics of disease: then and now European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Rahime Çokay Nebioğlu
ABSTRACT This article crystallises the links between capitalism and the politics of diseases. Capitalism is an economic and political system that depends not only on the production of capital, but also on the production of social relations. Just as it produces commodities, it reproduces and distributes new social relations by designating rivalries and alliances. Pandemic outbreaks are ideal conditions
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Representing quarantine on film: fearing the monster inside European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Mirna Radin-Sabadoš
ABSTRACT Fictional representations of contagion, that is epidemic or pandemic in film, mainly fall within the genres of fantasy, horror, or science fiction, while their narratives focus on fear and panic, on disturbance of the social equilibrium. Approaching the film interpretations of the subject from the perspective of biopolitics as it is understood by Giorgio Agamben, this paper explores how media
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“And then I see the disinfectant where it knocks it out in a minute”: Donald Trump as patient zero and superspreader of Covid-19 cartoon logic European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Sara Polak, Anne Zwetsloot
ABSTRACT In Donald Trump’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic, and particularly around his own bout with the disease, the intersection of “traditional” themes and tropes – i.e. the representation and narration of communicable disease, presidential image-making, and the visual language of play and politics – come together in novel manners. We will argue that Trump’s employment of cartoon logic relies
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Gender roles, parenthood, and the ethics of care in pandemic media narratives pre- and post-Covid-19 European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Raffaella Baccolini, Chiara Xausa
ABSTRACT Crises have always brought along transformations in gender identities, roles, and relations: while much has changed in Western culture regarding the role of women and notions of masculinity are also challenged, efforts to control female roles, bodies, and sexualities persist. For example, Susan Faludi’s The Terror Dream has described the post-9/11 age as an era of reconstituted “traditional”
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Kill is kiss: viral words bringing the end of rhetorical discourse in Pontypool European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Seda Pekşen
ABSTRACT Bruce McDonald’s 2008 film Pontypool is based on Tony Burgess’s novel Pontypool Changes Everything (1998). In the film, certain words become viral and infect people, turning them into zombies. The audience experiences these events on the surface level as a sense of meaninglessness. Yet, on a deeper level, the film highlights the meaninglessness of everyday language and the urgent need to cleanse
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Spread the word: mattertext as bio-art European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Başak Ağın
ABSTRACT The recent material turn in the posthumanities has foregrounded the idea that agency is not unique to humans but is a shared capacity of all bodily natures of the planet. With this convolution – or rather the deconstruction – of the conventional ways of producing knowledge, the research methodologies at hand have experienced a turn towards a postqualitative mindset, which revolves around the
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The dying city and the sick messiah: apocalypse and utopia in Neo Tokyo European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2023-01-19 Sotirios Triantafyllos
ABSTRACT This article examines Katsuhiro Ōtomo’s film Akira (1988) not simply as a touchstone of the 1980s cyberpunk genre dealing heavily with the themes of post-humanism, but as a metaphor for utopia’s demise and the death drive of a world in decline; as a cinematic text, it is paradigmatic of postmodernity’s cultural formations and utopianism’s fate in the age of late capitalism. In particular,
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Introduction: Patriarchal backlashes to feminism in times of crisis: plus ça change, moins ça change European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Renate Haas, Florence Binard
ABSTRACT Susan Faludi’s feminist classic Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women was first published in 1991, thirty-one years ago, and yet its message seems to resonate more clearly than ever. The current issue focuses on present-day Europe and the last few decades, covering a very wide spectrum. There are surveys of countries or their crucial sectors (Bulgaria, Italy and France). The
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Globalising genderphobia and the case of Bulgaria European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Emilia Slavova
ABSTRACT Globalisation has made it easier for progressive ideas to cross borders. Yet the same can be said about regressive ideologies. Under the guise of protecting local traditions, family rights and national identity, genderphobic discourses have spread in seemingly unrelated parts of the world. Bulgaria is a case in point: a powerful religious-nationalist-conservative front has formed against women’s
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We need to talk about gender: anti-feminist, anti-gender backlash all’italiana European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Polina Shvanyukova
ABSTRACT This paper engages with the topic of anti-feminist, anti-gender backlash in contemporary Italy in three steps. Firstly, it reviews some recent research examining the various ramifications of anti-feminist and anti-gender discourse in the Italian context. The role that the Catholic Church has played in championing the crusade against gender, most visibly by fabricating the so-called ideologia
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“Antifeminist ‘feminism’”: the case of French “decolonial intersectional feminism” European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Florence Binard
ABSTRACT The object of this article is to show that in recent times of crisis – notably in view of the repeated terrorist attacks that have taken place in France – a form of insidious backlash on feminism has operated through antifeminist appropriations of feminism by self-named French “decolonial intersectional feminists” whose antiracist stance and praxis leads them to sometimes distort and even
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Memes, trolls and the manosphere: mapping the manifold expressions of antifeminism and misogyny online European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Maxime Dafaure
ABSTRACT Through a number of case studies, this article will conduct an analysis of the sometimes seemingly ubiquitous antifeminism, and even misogyny, in certain anglophone online spaces, and of their roots in older historical antifeminist discourses. It will also discuss how this patriarchal backlash is strategically presented by its proponents as an indicator of a crisis in contemporary masculinity
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Precarious times, Neoliberalist backlashes and discourses of post-truth in Ali Smith’s Summer European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Julia Kuznetski
ABSTRACT This article is a response to the neoliberalist/right-wing populist backlashes in times of crisis and their reflection in the media, as well as the multidirectional crises that Europe is facing at the moment, most notably the war in Ukraine and the recent Covid-19 pandemic. I argue that these appeared as crises within crises, happening to an already socially precarious world, laying bare the
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A note on Angela Merkel’s review of Susan Faludi’s Backlash and feminisms East-West European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Renate Haas
ABSTRACT Angela Merkel’s review of Susan Faludi’s Backlash from 1993 is an illuminating document as regards her relationship with feminism as well as with the media. She wrote it as Minister for Women and Youth, when a central task was bringing East and West Germany again closer together. Twelve years later, during the decisive election campaign of 2005, Alice Schwarzer’s EMMA, a leading feminist magazine
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Flawed arguments, structural misogyny and rape culture: court cases in contemporary literature European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 M.S. Suárez Lafuente
ABSTRACT This article highlights the persistence and violence of rape culture not only insofar as it pertains to sexual aggression but also in reference to arguments used in court cases. The language and body language used by defence attorneys add to the psychological pain suffered by the victim in having to face her aggressor(s) and relive a traumatic experience. I will analyse some contemporary British
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#Feminist – naming controversies and celebrating points of connection and joy in current feminisms European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Greta Olson, Elisabeth Lechner
ABSTRACT In a dialogue, the authors discuss controversies in feminisms and their hopes for feminist futures. The first sections dismantle oppositional catfight narratives regarding feminisms and highlight the misogynist and transphobic cultural-political work they perform. Feminists and trans activists find common cause in resisting the subordination and control of womxn’s and trans persons’ bodies
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Victorian materialisms: approaching nineteenth-century matter European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-04-04 Ariane de Waal, Ursula Kluwick
ABSTRACT In this introduction to the special issue Victorian Materialisms, the authors review the material turn in cultural and literary studies, foregrounding the necessity of more historical nuance. While new materialist accounts tend to stress the post-Enlightenment persistence of dualistic oppositions between nature and culture, humans and nonhumans, body and mind, the editors of this special issue
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Littoral books: archiving oceanic memory through pressed and printed plants European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-04-04 Ann Garascia
ABSTRACT This article identifies a Victorian moment in the genealogy of the intellectual formation of the “book of nature” made visible through Charles Anderson’s Sea Mosses herbarium (1873) to demonstrate how the herbarium transforms the metaphorical “book of nature” into a material site of ecological archiving. To underscore the registers of ecological archiving and reading taking shape through Anderson’s
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Mary Seacole’s plant matter(s): vegetal entanglements of the Black Atlantic in Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-04-04 Jennifer Leetsch
ABSTRACT This article offers a new reading of Mary Seacole’s autobiography from the perspective of material ecocriticism. The Black Atlantic origins of Seacole’s pharmacopoeia reveal a troubled, complex engagement with histories of medicine and cure, with local indigenous knowledges, and with the often-violent circulation of plants and people across the planet. Paying close attention to instances in
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When nature “punches back”: a new materialist reading of Alice Perrin’s East of Suez European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-04-04 Éadaoin Agnew
ABSTRACT Alice Perrin’s East of Suez is a collection of short stories set in India. She immediately plunges her readers into an unfamiliar and intense world where nature is not a passive object onto which the human subject can impose its will. Instead, nature is persistently visceral, vibrant, and vital in ways that echo changing perceptions of the natural world, especially in relation to matter and
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The unity of thought and thing: collapsing mind-matter boundaries in the poetry and prose of Constance Naden European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-04-04 Irmtraud Huber
ABSTRACT Hylo-idealism, the militantly atheist philosophical persuasion of Victorian poet and philosopher Constance Naden, attempted to combine what had long been thought irreconcilable: materialism with idealism, mind and matter, thought and thing. It did so radically by denying the difference between these dualistic terms. This paper explores the implications of this theory as it was developed in
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Experiencing textures: the materiality of illegitimacy in Wilkie Collins’s No Name European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-04-04 Anja Hartl
ABSTRACT This article introduces texture as a key category of material analysis in Victorian literature and culture. Challenging distinctions between inside and outside structures, texture offers not only a complex, multi-layered understanding of material surfaces but also provides aesthetic and interpretive tools for rendering and analysing matter in literary and cultural representations. Drawing
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“Stimulated by these agents to vigorous action”: the language of suntanning and materiality of skin in Victorian culture European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-04-04 Charlotte Mathieson
ABSTRACT This paper explores the materiality of skin as it is figured and re-figured through sunburn and suntanning descriptions in nineteenth-century culture. In nineteenth-century literary representations, the suntanned skin of white, British subjects is depicted through a rich array of terminology attending not only to the transformation of colour but also to the surface texture of the skin. This
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The unrealised potential of Robert Browning’s “Gold Hair: A Legend of Pornic” European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2022-04-04 Heather Hind
ABSTRACT This article explores a hitherto neglected context of Robert Browning’s “Gold Hair” (1864), analysing the poem in relation to the tradition of “hair harvests” in Brittany, France, as well as the broader contexts of the hair trade and hairwork in the nineteenth century. In doing so, it makes a case for reading the textual evocation of hair in the poem literally to trace a cultural shift towards
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Disseminating knowledge: the effects of digitalised academic discourse on language, genre and identity European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-12-20 Rosa Lorés, Giuliana Diani
ABSTRACT In this introduction to the special issue Disseminating knowledge: The effects of digitalised academic discourse in language, genre and identity, the authors discuss the impact that digital technologies and the Web have had on academia. They show how this attests to interrelations between new digital platforms of knowledge creation and dissemination and their use within discourse communities
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Multimodal metadiscourse in digital academic journals on linguistics, engineering and medicine European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-12-20 María Luisa Carrió-Pastor
ABSTRACT The main objectives of this study are, first, to analyse the interactive metadiscourse devices used in engineering, medicine and linguistics and the identities represented; second, to identify the visual metadiscourse elements employed in the three identities constructed in the three specific settings and, finally, to classify and compare the multimodal metadiscourse used to cohere the different
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Managing discipline and culture-specific knowledge for digitalised, open-access academic discourse: interactive metadiscourse in economics and law research articles European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-12-20 Girolamo Tessuto
ABSTRACT This paper examines the role of interactive metadiscourse in a representative corpus of digitalised, open access social science empirical research articles from the Economics and Law disciplines. Both distributional and functional analyses of interactive metadiscourse resources support a continuum of qualitative and quantitative empirical research analysis methods as necessary to regulate
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How does digital context influence interaction in large live online lectures? The case of English-medium instruction European Journal of English Studies (IF 0.7) Pub Date : 2021-12-20 Mercedes Querol-Julián
ABSTRACT This paper examines the evolving genre of university lectures. It focuses on synchronous online lectures. The aim of the study is to shed some light on how interaction between teacher and students unfolds in large English-medium instruction (EMI) lectures in the digital context. A qualitative multimodal microanalysis of an episode of interaction was performed from an (inter)action multimodal