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In his chapter “David Copperfield’s Home Movies,” published in the book collection Dickens on Screen, John Bowen illustrates “how David Copperfield narrates scenes of memory in quasi-filmic ways, and how these ways are implicated in... more
In his chapter “David Copperfield’s Home Movies,” published in the book collection Dickens on Screen, John Bowen illustrates “how David Copperfield narrates scenes of memory in quasi-filmic ways, and how these ways are implicated in questions of male sexual identity, which it explores through various kinds of fetishism, voyeurism, sadism, and sexual transgression” (29). This paper takes Bowen’s essay as an invitation to explore another, more playful side of filmic/novelistic gender-construction, in part by reading the novel David Copperfield retrospectively via a film on which it had, I believe, a special influence: Neil Jordan’s Breakfast on Pluto, based on the novel by Patrick McCabe. Jordan’s film, I will argue, both draws upon this already inherently filmic/novelistic play with gender in David Copperfield and also engages it in “queer interpretation and enquiry”  in such a way as potentially to revise the way we read gender constitution in the Victorian novel.
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LFQ_Gender_deConstructions_.pdf
Gender_deConstructions_and_Disjunctive_Montage__Narrative_Telos_and_Filmic_Play_from_Charles_Dickens_David_Copperfield_to_Neil_Jordans_B.pdf
What happens to a culture in which the death drive has been totally repressed and turned into a narcissistic desire to consume? Alexander Bove’s response to A. Kiarina Kordela’s first book, $urplus: Spinoza, Lacan (2007), puts ethics,... more
What happens to a culture in which the death drive has been totally repressed and turned into a narcissistic desire to consume? Alexander Bove’s response to A. Kiarina Kordela’s first book, $urplus: Spinoza, Lacan (2007), puts ethics, psychoanalysis, Marxism, and biopolitics in conversation with each other. Drawing out a gap in Kordela’s logic, Bove concludes that the insertion Levinas’s concept of the face allows us to conceptualize the role of the death drive in ethics in late capitalism. (Jen Hedler Phillis)
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From: ELH Volume 74, Number 3, Fall 2007 (pp. 655-679). On portraits in the Victorian novel, mimesis and caricature, Lacanian theory and characterization.
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The V21 Collations: Book Forum welcomes Alex Bove, Racheal Fest and Nathan Hensley in conversation about Bruce Robbins’s most recent publication The Beneficiary (Duke, 2017). (See link for full forum)
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Book review of Tom Cohen's collection, Telemorphosis: Theory in the Era of Climate Change on Open Humanities Press
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Syllabus: ENGL 201 03 "Art in the Anthropocene: Extraterrestrial Perspectives." This is a rhetoric / composition course that centers on representations of the Anthropocene and creative and theoretical approaches to climate change.
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