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Archive for the ‘Writing assignment 2: your archive’ Category

Elder Wands and Jane Austen Notepads: The Harry Potter Archive and the Academic Community

Sheila Gross Dr. Alexis Lothian ENGL 985: Archives and Feelings 8 October 2013   Elder Wands and Jane Austen Notepads: The Harry Potter Archive and the Academic Community   As a scholar of Literature (and I am purposely using the capital “L”), I am expected to research and publish within a specific field.  This will […]

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Demons in My Archive (and the Classroom)

Megha Baikadi 985 archives and feelings Dr Alexis Lothian Writing Assignment Two, 10/8/2013   Choose an object you’ve been drawn to write scholarly work about. What work does this do as part of a canonical or extra-canonical archive? Why does it matter? [reference at least two of the readings, 1000-2000 words.]   Of all of […]

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Failure in the Canon

Londo: There, you see! I’m going to live. G’Kar: So it would seem. Well, it’s an imperfect universe. My usual scholarly work consists of case studies, empirical research, and the occasional commentary on critical theory. My chosen field, Composition and TESOL doesn’t have a “canon” per se; most of what’s considered essential knowledge is continually […]

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What kind of History Do we read in the Postcolonial Archives?

Menia Almenia Dr. Lothian ENG 985 Assignment #2 8 October 2013     Since I start reading literary works written by postcolonial authors, I usually find myself digging in the past to identify the facts of many historical events that might be misled by the hegemonic superstructure. Surly I can see why most of the […]

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Vivat Inepta Archivo

Matthew Loudon; Dr. Alexis Lothian; ENGL 985; 8 October 2013 (written this way so it’s not addressed as four tiny paragraphs) Vivat Inepta Archivo I wish that I could pinpoint an exact moment when I began studying animation. I had long been in line for studying English, having found, like most of literary scholars, the […]

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Braiding out of Binaries: What Arab American Women’s Literature can Teach in Introductory Literature Courses

In one of my Introduction to Literature classes last week, we were looking closely at Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll House.  I typically teach this play when we are beginning to look at the genre of drama because I feel that it is highly accessible to students who have not read a lot of drama.  We […]

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The Object and the Sense of the Object: Taking a Bite

Harry Harrison’s Bill, the Galactic Hero begins with the narrator’s Freudian observation, “Bill never realized that sex was the cause of it all” (1). How that made me laugh when I was fourteen.  Yet, some decades later, it is difficult to get away from the realization that comes with regarding the bald, comic statement as […]

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The Queering of Fate: How James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room Reveals the Impossible Idea of an Isolated Archive

I was on a path. No, I thought I was on a path. I knew exactly what kind of African-American literature I wanted to study, teach, and continue to fall passionately in love with. Everything changed when I was introduced to James Baldwin. Although criticized for his lack of attention to race in many of […]

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Restaurant Culture, Failures, and Queer Time

Lauren Shoemaker Dr. Lothian ENGL 985 8 October 2013   Restaurant Culture, Failures, and Queer Time             Plenty of memes and Buzzfeed articles circulate online claiming that everyone should work in the restaurant business for a short amount of time in order to make them a better person or appreciate a wait staff.  I used […]

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The Panopticon: A Philosophical Object for Scholarly Work

The-Panopticon Kamal Salem ENGL 985 Dr. Alexis Lothian Assignment # 2 Oct, 08th, 2013   The Panopticon: A Philosophical Object for Scholarly Work One of the major objects that I have been drawn to writer scholarly work about is the Panopticon. The Panopticon is an institutional building designed by the philosopher Jeremy Bentham and elaborated […]

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Source: https://985archive.queergeektheory.org/category/writing-assignment-2-your-archive/