What is Trans Literature?
* Zoe Tuck *
What is trans literature? What does it mean for a literature to emerge? What is our relationship with the past? What is our responsibility to the future?
What is Trans Literature? Read More »
* Zoe Tuck *
What is trans literature? What does it mean for a literature to emerge? What is our relationship with the past? What is our responsibility to the future?
What is Trans Literature? Read More »
Reading Mourning Diary, I had the strange experience of feeling transported, through Barthes’s language, back across contours of my own mourning.
The Private Art? On Roland Barthes’s Mourning Diary Read More »
* Eric McDowell *
Sweetie is a film about sisters and—like just about all, I think, of Campion’s films—it easily passes the Bechdel Test. But it’s also a film about romance and heterosexual love—a woman’s fated relationship with an “important” man.
First Films: Jane Campion’s “Sweetie” Read More »
Raise your hand if you’ve ever said, “Holster your weapon,” and meant it because someone was aiming a loaded handgun at you, cocked and ready to fire?
Warsaw Dispatch: Holster Your Weapon Read More »
* Airea D. Matthews *
I didn’t want to be judged or ‘poored’, and I knew I was vulnerable to both. So, I vowed to do whatever was necessary to resist the implication and belong, even if it meant being aggressively fake, asking for things I knew my mother couldn’t afford or flat-out lying to my friends.
The Cost of The Floss Read More »
* Kaveh Bassiri *
I was surprised by the number and quality of the different works, as well as how often these books could be used as teaching tools. The Middle East, with its mythic and socio-political significance, has become a great source of inspiration for many important graphic novelists. The Middle East, with its mythic and socio-political significance, has become a great source of inspiration for many important graphic novelists.
The Middle East through Graphic Novels Read More »
* Claire Skinner *
One day last week, after dropping my dad off at the airport for a flight back east, I found myself with seven empty hours to spare in Las Vegas. Only May, but already hot–101 degrees. And with the dry wind blowing down from the mountains, it felt even hotter
At Loose Ends in Las Vegas Read More »
* Mary Camille Beckman *
What value does the culture place on this “girl-woman transition” that it won’t name the people going through it? Robert Altman’s film 3 Women (1977) doesn’t quite answer this question. It does, however, dramatize its premise: the problem of inhabiting an unnamed space. And it does so by launching two of its three title characters—Millie Lammoreaux (Shelley Duvall) and Pinky Rose (Sissy Spacek)—into that girl-woman no man’s land. The dramatic tension that arises propels 3 Women forward.
No Man’s Land: Robert Altman’s 3 Women Read More »
* Kevin Haworth *
I had started driving at six-thirty that morning, heading from my home in Appalachian Ohio to the central part of Iowa. Once I escaped Columbus’s orbit (and its early morning traffic), the roads became so straight I steered with a single finger on the wheel. With cruise control and well-balanced tires, driving through the middle states is an act requiring little intervention. Miles passed under the car like loose thoughts. Every time I blinked, another half-hour had gone by.
Out in the Middle of Somewhere Read More »
* Paula Mendoza *
‘Language Justice’ is a term I was wholly unfamiliar with before this encounter. Hearing those two words together, and thinking of what it had to do with this magic book bike, sent a charge through my brain.
Antena, Language Justice, and Poetry Read More »