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Publications

2013
Mikkonen, Jukka . 2013. A Companion to the Philosophy of Literature, ed. Garry L. Hagberg and Walter Jost. Partial Answers 11(2): 333-336. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Book Review
Budick, Emily Miller . 2013. After Testimony: The Ethics and Aesthetics of Holocaust Narrative for the Future, ed. Jakob Lothe, Susan Rubin Suleiman, and James Phelan. Partial Answers 11(2): 339-344. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Book Review
Scranton, Roy . 2013. Authoring War: The Literary Representation of War from the Iliad to Iraq, by Kate McLaughlin. Partial Answers 11(2): 350-353. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Book Review
Stelzig, Eugen . 2013. Bureau of Missing Persons: Writing the Secret Lives of Fathers, by Roger J. Porter. Partial Answers. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Book Review
Stromberg, David . 2013. Communicational Criticism: Studies in Literature as Dialogue, by Roger D. Sell. Partial Answers 11(2): 337-339. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Book Review
Levin, Yael . 2013. Dialogue with/and Great Books: The Dynamics of Canon Formation, by David Fishelov. Partial Answers 11(1): 178-181. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Book Review
Halevi-Wise, Yael . 2013. From Continuity to Contiguity: Toward a New Jewish Literary Thinking, by Dan Miron. Partial Answers 11(1): 173-177. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Book Review
Melcer-Padon, Nourit . 2013. Glory and Agony: Isaac’s Sacrifice and National Narrative, by Yael S. Feldman. Partial Answers 11(2): 344-348. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Book Review
Pervukhina, Natalia . 2013. Russia on the Edge. Imagined Geographies and Post-Soviet Identity, by Edith W. Clowes. Partial Answers 11(2): 348-359. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Book Review
Rosenfeld, Alvin . 2013. The Third Pillar by Geoffrey Hartman. Partial Answers 11(1): 163-167. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Book Review
Biemann, Asher D. . 2013. Witnesses for the Future: Philosophy and Messianism, by Pierre Bouretz. Partial Answers 11(1): 167-173. . Publisher's VersionAbstract
Rook Review
Canales, Gustavo Sánchez . 2013. 'Lectura para personas de amplio criterio': Censorship in the Translations of Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint and the Professor of Desire. Partial Answers 11(2): 279-291. . Publisher's Version

This article focuses on the effects of censorship on the translations of two of Roth's novels into Spanish: Portnoy's Complaint (1969) and The Professor of Desire (1977). These two novels, published in Spanish for the first time in 1977 and 1978 respectively - a period when Spain had barely left behind General Francisco Franco's dictatorship (1939-1975) - suffered various forms of censorship. The article shows how the four criteria (Abellán 1980) used by the censors of the period - sexual morality, linguistic decorum, politics and respect for religion as an institution - were applied in the case of these two Roth novels.

 

January 2016: Gustavo Sánchez Canales teaches English at the Faculty of Teacher Training and Education at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, where he is also Vicedean for Research and Innovation. He served as Viceadean for International Relations between 2011 and 2013. From 1999 to 2010 he taught English and American literature at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. His research focuses on contemporary Jewish-American Literature. He has published book chapters, articles, and essays on Saul Bellow, Philip Roth, Bernard Malamud, Cynthia Ozick, Chaim Potok, Rebecca Goldstein, Allegra Goodman, and  Michael Chabon, among others.

He has recently coedited with Victoria Aarons (Trinity, San Antonio, TX) a thematic volume on Philip Roth entitled History, Memory, and the Making of Character in Roth’s Fiction. CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture 16.2 (2014) http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/clcweb/vol16/iss2/  

 

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Kearful, Frank . 2013. Alimentary poetics: Robert Lowell and Allen Ginsberg. Partial Answers 11(1): 87-108. . Publisher's Version

Robert Lowell coined the famous distinction between cooked and raw poetry, but beginning with Joel Barlow's epic treat The Hasty Pudding there is a long tradition of American poetics sustained by copious and artful use of tropes of hunger, food, and eating. Allen Ginsberg's Howl and Other Poems and Lowell's Life Studies would be emaciated beyond recognition without them. Also taking other poems into account, the essay argues that Lowell and Ginsberg did more to enrich the American alimentary poetic tradition than anyone else since T. S. Eliot and Wallace Stevens. 

 

Frank Kearful is Professor of English at Bonn University, where he has taught since 1974. He has been a visiting professor at Tübingen University and Hamburg University, and before moving to Germany in 1972 he was an Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Washington. He has written numerous articles on twentieth-century American poetry, is editor of The Robert Lowell Newsletter, and since 2003 he has written the annual chapter on American poetry since the 1940s for American Literary Scholarship.

 

Updated July 29, 2011

 

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Manning, Susan . 2013. Did Human Character Change? Representing Women and Fiction from Shakespeare to Virginia Woolf. Partial Answers 11(1): 29-52. . Publisher's Version

This essay reconsiders Virginia Woolf's much-debated claim that "on or about December 1910, human character changed," reassessing its import not as the provocation to her contemporaries that seems to have been intended, or as a statement of originality, but in a historical envelope that encompasses Woolf's own fictional oeuvre within a tradition of representing women in fiction. This tradition is essentially rhetorical and literary rather than essentialist; it engages with representations and associations rather than directly with psychological or philosophical questions about personality or identity. As such, "character" should be understood as involving a series of recognizable codes or tropes played through new contexts, with Shakespeare's representations of women as a constant touchstone or reference point. A pioneer of "stream of consciousness" prose and Modernist fiction, Woolf is normally read for her innovations in representing selfhood; this experimentalism, I suggest, is built on a bedrock of familiar imagery that reveals her involvement in a continuing literary tradition of character representation. Her interest in late nineteenth-century and contemporary developments in depth psychology notwithstanding, Woolf's revolutionary prose style shows evidence of her careful reading of previous literary evocations of character, particularly the characters of women. What is at issue, then, is not primarily existential questions about whether character "is" innate, self-fashioned, or merely linguistic, but rather critical or representational issues of how literary character has been evoked so as to create certain responses in readers. In the process, however, the larger existential questions are implicitly invoked, and shown to be not novel concerns of modernist psychology but continuing issues in literary understandings of the concept of "character" itself, at least as far back as the seventeenth century. In addition to a range of Woolf's own critical and creative writing, the essay considers works by Daniel Defoe, Alexander Pope, Robert Burns, Jane Austen, Elizabeth Oakes Smith, Walter Pater, Henry James and Oscar Wilde.

 

January 2013: Born in Glasgow, educated in England and now resident in Edinburgh, Susan Manning is Grierson Professor of English Literature, and Director of the interdisciplinary Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities at the University of Edinburgh. Her work on literature and nationhood focuses on the Scottish Enlightenment and on Scottish-American literary relations, reflected in her comparative studies The Puritan-Provincial Vision and Fragments of Union. She is one of the editors of the three volume Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature, and has co-edited the first Transatlantic Literary Studies Reader. She has recently completed a book on literary character.

 

Masiero, Pia . 2013. The Difference in One Word: The Italian Translation of Philip Roth's American Pastoral. Partial Answers 11(2): 305-319. . Publisher's Version

This article addresses the problems of the Italian translation of Philip Roth's American Pastoral by Vincenzo Mantovani. The theoretical backdrop against which the assessment is set concerns the novel's intentional system as David Herman interprets it in his "Narrative Theory and the Intentional Stance." Accordingly, the notion of "intentional equivalence" is proposed as a tool for comparing the original text and its translation. Well aware that the creation of effects starts at the lexical level, word choices at crucial textual junctures are examined, starting with the incipit and proceeding with pivotal moments in the first 90 pages of the book. These pages revolve around a very tight intentional construction depending on Zuckerman's immersion in the Swede's mystique and the consequent need for the narrator to write his story. The article demonstrates that because of inexplicable translation choices the Italian reader is inevitably led into a storyworld different from the original as far as focalizing perspective, ironic distance, and empathetic involvement are concerned. 

June 2013: Pia Masiero is assistant professor of North-American Literature at the University of Venice, Ca’ Foscari. Her research and teaching focus on twentieth-century prose, the American Renaissance, as well as narratology and contemporary American fiction. Her recent publications include, Philip Roth and the Zuckerman Books: the Making of a Storyworld (Cambria Press 2011) “‘Nothing is impersonally perceived’: Dreams, Realistic Chronicles and Perspectival Effects in American Pastoral” (Presses Universitaires du Mirail, 2011) and Names across the Color Line: William Faulkner’s Short Fiction 1931-1942 LT2 Studio 2012).

Masiero, Pia . 2013. FROM TRANSLATION TO INTERPRETATION: INTRODUCTION TO THE FORUM 'TRANSLATING PHILIP ROTH'. Partial Answers 11(2): 277-278. . Publisher's Version
The forum consists of studies of selected translations of Philip Roth's works into Spanish, French, Italian, and Polish. The translations, along with the interpretations and misinterpretations to which they lead, reflect the time and place in which they are performed but also shed new light on the linguistic and cultural folds of the original text. 
Kagan, Matvei . 2013. Ivan Sergeievich Turgenev: On the Centennial of His Birth. Partial Answers 11(1): 1-7. . Publisher's Version
First publication in English of the Yiddish article on I. S. Turgenev published by Matvei (Mordechai Nisan) Kagan (1889-1937), a Russian philosopher of Jewish origin, in 1919. Kagan praises Turgenev as the first Russian novelist whose novels made Russian literature and culture a part of the world culture. This was a result of what Kagan called Turgenev's svive-libe - the love for one's cultural environment characteristic of the Russian intelligentsia that represented the whole people as the living and powerful collective. Trans. David Stromberg
Katsman, Roman . 2013. Love and Bewilderment: Matvei Kagan's Literary Critical Concepts. Partial Answers 11(1): 9-28. . Publisher's Version

The essay discusses the literary-critical concepts of Matvei Kagan (1889-1937) - a Russian philosopher of Jewish origin, a student and follower of Hermann Cohen, Paul Natorp, and Ernst Cassirer, and a close friend of Mikhail Bakhtin in his early, constitutive period of the Nevel Circle (1918-1920). The concepts of love and bewilderment, as defined in Kagan's works on Turgenev and Pushkin, are examined in the context of his philosophy of history, culture, and art. In the center of Kagan's historical theory of literature lies the idea of the Jewish community as a model for canonization of the cultural work. Kagan views literature as generating self-awareness and national-cultural identity, either through tragic bewilderment at the loss of freedom and love in history (in the case of Pushkin) or through a culture's self-defining dialogue with other cultures (as in the case of Turgenev). The central concept of this approach is that of svive-libe - "love of environment," interpreted as love for a community's cultural contribution in the context of its purposefulness in a universal human context.

 

January 2013: Dr. Roman Katsman is a researcher of Hebrew and Russian literature and of literary theory and poetics. He is an author of the books: The Time of Cruel Miracles: Mythopoesis in Dostoevsky and Agnon (2002), Poetics of Becoming: Dynamic Processes of Mythopoesis in Modern and Postmodern Hebrew and Slavic Literature (2005), At the Other End of Gesture. Anthropological Poetics of Gesture in Modern Hebrew Literature (2008), and 'A Small Prophecy': Sincerity and Rhetoric in the Works of S.Y. Agnon (2013, in Hebrew, in press).

 

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Houser, Tammy Amiel . 2013. Margaret Atwood's Feminist Ethics of Gracious Housewifery. Partial Answers 11(1): 109-132. . Publisher's Version

The article explores Margaret Atwood's engagement with the ethics of hospitality as manifested in her novel The Blind Assassin (2000) and the short story "The Art of Cooking and Serving" (2006). It claims that these works point to an ethical vision which is best understood in light of the philosophical ideas of radical hospitality suggested by Emmanuel Levinas and Jacques Derrida but with an important feminist revision. Focusing on allusions to an inspiring cookbook, prominent in the two works by Atwood, the article analyzes the works' appropriation and reformulation of the feminine myth of gracious housewifery for signifying both the subject's obligation to the other and the ideal of generous giving and attentive care. It addresses the conflict that Atwood stages between a feminist critique of the duty of hospitality imposed on women and the ethical view of the subject's un-chosen and absolute responsibility to another. 

 

January 2013: Dr. Tammy Amiel Houser is a lecturer at the Department of Literature, Language, and the Arts of the Open University of Israel. Her research is in Comparative Literature and its intersection with feminist theories, political conflicts, and ethical perspectives. She has written on Ian McEwan’s fiction, (Connotations: A Journal for Critical Debate). Her book, Feminist Perspectives on the Coming-of-Age Novel (Hebrew), which deals with George Eliot’s reshaping of the Bildungsroman, is forthcoming from the Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics (Tel Aviv University) in cooperation with Hakibbuz Hameuchad Press.

 

Sjöberg, Sami . 2013. Mysticism of Immanence: Lettrism, Sprachkritik, and the Immediate Message. Partial Answers 11(1): 53-69. . Publisher's Version

The essay examines the epistemological possibilities of artistic imaginary languages and their ontological effects in the avant-garde movement "lettrism." The movement employed imaginary language, which illustrates an anti-rational theory of language. The problematics of such quasi-language are manifested most radically in relation to quietistlinguistic philosophy (Sprachkritik): the identification of the limits of thinking and language in philosophy confronts the utopian belief in the possibility of "private" communication in the avant-garde. Lettrism subverts the normative order of systematic language by means of invented signs, which are not arbitrary but unorthodox. These signs supposedly express that which philosophy designates as epistemic privacy - what can be known to one person only. The paradoxical claim that an imaginary language can express the epistemically private gives rise to what I term the mysticism of immanence. Neither distinctively religious nor atheistic, the mysticism of immanence is based on the idealistic assertion that one is able to express not only the existence but also the contents of epistemic privacy. Moreover, the renunciation of conventional language suggests that immanence is in this case alinguistic. In brief, for lettrists, thinking did not necessitate language. Lettrist imaginary language points out the necessity for convention as a stabilizing framework for meaning production. By advocating the idea of an "immediate message," which remains between mediation and immediacy, imaginary language exceeds the limits of immanence. Since an imaginary language cannot be shared or self-contained, it is an opening of immanence towards other than immanence. This other is not represented as any absolute transcendence, any version of the beyond, but rather as a collapse of the limits of immanence, limits that are subject to negotiation because the immediate message gives rise to a new and expanded sense of the immanent.

 

January 2013: Sami Sjöberg is a researcher, professional editor, and journalist holding a PhD in Comparative Literature. His thesis “Anterior Future. Essays on Messianism, Anti-Rationality, and Mystical Language in Lettrism” (2012) addresses the manifestations of messianic and kabbalistic themes, motifs, and techniques in the avant-garde movement "lettrism." He has written on French avant-garde literature and its relation to Judaism, on lettrism, contemporary European art and the poetics of the avant-garde. His academic articles, criticism, and essays on art have been published in international and in Finnish journals. In the autumn of 2012 a theme issue "Nothing" of Angelaki will be published with Sjöberg as a co-editor.