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2004
Segal (Rudnik), Nina . 2004. The Organization of Space in Alexander Blok's Retribution. Partial Answers 2(2): 75-107. . Publisher's Version

Alexander Blok’s unfinished poem Retribution (1910–1921), regarded by the contemporaries as his spiritual testament, depicts the destinies of Russia as part of the total struggle between cosmic forces which was reflected in the historical catastrophes of the late 19th – early 20th centuries. The essay uses the notion of the chronotope to analyze the structure of the poem. The time-space of the poem is the vast expanse of the Russian empire during the wars between East and West (the wars between Russian and Turkey, Russian and Japan, World War I). The chronotope of the poem reflect tensions between Westernizers and Slavophiles, as well as mythological historiosophical positions of such diverse thinkers as Vladimir Soloviev and Helena Blavatsky. Its mythical, epic, historical, and lyrical constituents seem to predict cosmic clashes; instead, however, the lyrical chronotope of the poem gains predominance and translates cosmic conflicts into the emotional turmoil and death of the lyrical hero.

 

Nina Segal (Rudnik) teaches Russian and Comparative Literature in the Russian Department of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She has published books and articles on 20th-century Russian literature in the comparative framework. Present research interests include Russian and European Symbolism in literature, philosophy, and culture (Kandinsky, Vyacheslav Ivanov, Fedor Stepun).

updated in January 2008

 

Wardi, Eynel . 2004. On Place and Space in Shirley Kaufman's 'Sanctum'. Partial Answers 2(2): 175-201. . Publisher's Version

 

The essay examines the relation between place and space in local art (in Israel) through a reading of Kaufman’s “Sanctum” and two environmental sculptures which it addresses, James Turrell’s Space That Sees (the Israel Museum) and Micha Ullman’s Sky (Tel-Hai Museum).  Drawing on Michel de Certeau’s concepts of “spatialization” and “cultural inhabitation,” among others, the essay traces Kaufman's attempt to clear an imaginative and psychic space beyond the constraints of the conflict-ridden place in which she lives and writes, i.e. Israel, and ultimately to find — or create —  her own place in it.

 

 

Eynel Wardi is a senior lecturer in the English Department at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is the author of Once Below a Time:  Dylan Thomas, Julia Kristeva, and Other Speaking Subjects (2000), and of several articles on Gerard Manley Hopkins. Her current research interests are “inhabitable spaces" in literature and Ecopoetics.

updated in March 2019

 

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Rosenfeld, Natania . 2004. Turning Back: Retracing Twentieth-Century Trauma in Virginia Woolf, Martin Amis, and W. G. Sebald. Partial Answers 2(2): 109-137. . Publisher's Version

The historical caesura of the Holocaust bisects the twentieth century, its horror effecting a kind of temporal doubling or fold in the psyches of survivors as well as a permanent damage on Enlightenment conceptions of the progressive march of time. The traumatic experience of a continual turning back inflects the twentieth-century novel and our readings of it, calling into question modernist tropes of redemption. This essay examines changes in the way that both the passage of time and the ghostly return of the dead are portrayed, first in a modern text, Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, which deals with World War I, and then in two postmodern works both of which inscribe a vain dream of the rectification of Holocaust trauma: Martin Amis’s Time’s Arrow and W. G. Sebald’s The Emigrants. My emphasis is on trajectories of plot and memory, trajectories that trauma distorts and the artistic impulse inclines to even out (as in Amis’s trope of the story told backwards, with genocide undone). While modernist experimentalism cannot help indulging in redemptive fantasies, it also incorporates its own critique of this conservative longing.

 

June 2004: Natania Rosenfeld teaches in the English Department of Knox College in Illinois, USA. She is the author of Outsiders Together: Virginia and Leonard Woolf (Princeton University Press, 2000) and a published poet. Two of her personal essays are forthcoming in prominent literary journals, and she is at work both on a collection of essays and on a book dealing with English Modernism, Diaspora, and the Holocaust, tentatively entitled "The Haunting of English Modernism."

 

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Young, Kay . 2004. A Woman's Space Is in the Home: Architecture, Privacy, and Melodrama in Pamela and Gaslight. Partial Answers 2(2): 51-74. . Publisher's Version

 

The paper presents a reading of the architectural settings of Samuel Richardson’s novel Pamela and [first name] Kukor’s film Gaslight in terms of the new valorization of privacy reflected in the “vertical arrangement” of the Georgian terrace houses.

 

 

June 2004: Kay Young is Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She is author of Ordinary Pleasures: Couples, Conversation, and Comedy, a study of narrative intimacy and happiness. Currently, she is writing a book called Coming to Consciousness: Mind, Body, Emotion and the 19th-Century English Novel.

 

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Upstone, Sara . 2004. Writing the Post-Colonial Space: Ben Okri's Magical City and the Subversion of Imperialism. Partial Answers 2(2): 139-159. . Publisher's Version

In recent years, focus on issue of the spatial has increased exponentially. Briefly charting this rise in its various theoretical forms, we may locate a common theme within many of the positions taken up in response to the spatial: a concern with turmoil and oppression, and with a shifting of both physical and political boundaries. Nowhere is this concern more explicit than in the post-colonial response to what may be seen as the most violent violation of space: the colonial appropriation of land and territory as part of the various imperial projects of previous centuries. In post-colonial writing the colonial space is acknowledged, rejected for its inauthenticity and then re-made. A detailed reading of a particular text – Ben Okri’s Infinite Riches – and of a particular space within this text – the city – allows us to exemplify some of the narrative strategies by which such a powerful reclaiming of space may be asserted by the post-colonial author.

 

June 2004: Sara Upstone is an AHRB-funded research student at Birkbeck College, where she also teaches. She is working on transformations of space in the postcolonial, magical realist novel. She has published articles on subjects ranging from J.R.R. Tolkien to Toni Morrison.  Her research interests include postcolonial, twentieth-century and contemporary literature, cultural and spatial theory and popular culture.

 

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