Volume 2, issue 1

Patke, Rajeev . 2004. The Islands of Poetry; the Poetry of Islands. Partial Answers 2(1): 177-194. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/244545. Publisher's Version

The essay examines some of the fascinating ways in which islands have inspired writers, and especially poets, into acts of symbolization in which an island provides the pretext for a variety of compulsive themes that range from the love or fear of solitude, isolation, and the need to escape to or from an island. The recurrent figures of this allegorical mode include Crusoe, Caliban, Odysseus, and The Man Who Loved Islands.

January 2004: Professor of English and author of The Long Poems of Wallace Stevens: An Interpretative Study (CUP, 1985); eo-editor of Complicities: Connections and Divisions-Literatures and Cultures of the Asia-Pacific Region (Peter Lang, 2003) and Institutions in Cultures: Theory and Practice (Rodopi, 1996); Guest Editor of The European Legacy 7.6 (December 2002).  “Benjamin and Bakhtin: The Possibility of Conversation.” Journal of Narrative Theory 33.1 (Winter 2003): 12-32. Author of numerous articles, including “Adorno and the Postcolonial,” New Formations 47(Summer 2002): 133-43; “Walter Benjamin's Arcades Project and the Postcolonial City,” Diacritics 40.4 (Winter 2000): 3-14.

Pervukhina, Natalia . 2004. Vladimir Pecherin's Apologia pro vita mea (Mémoires d'outre-tombe): A Strategy of Defense. Partial Answers 2(1): 53-80. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/244541. Publisher's Version

Vladimir Pecherin (1807-1885), a Russian political emigré and Catholic convert was a controversial figure both in nineteenth-century Ireland and in Russian intellectual history. In his autobiographical notes and in the letters to his Russian corespondents of the 1860s and the 1870s, eventually collected in Apologia pro vita mea (Mémoires d'outre-tombe), Pecherin provides a vivid display of the evolution of Russian thought. His writings as a whole constitute an artistic presentation of the Russian Zeitgeist. Certain glaring contradictions between the ideas expressed in Pecherin's Russian correspondence and the reality of his long life within the Catholic Church require explanation. The article focuses on the authorial intention behind Pecherin’s autobiographical writing. In the hope of cementing his connection with Russia, Pecherin created in his memoirs the largely stock literary image of a “superfluous man,” a dominant literary figure of nineteenth-century Russian literature. Pecherin’s practical activity within the Catholic Church was, however, by no means superfluous, as his reputation in Dublin attests. Pecherin’s epistles to Russia invert the genre of  “confession of conversion” and form a “confession of disillusionment.” Pecherin’s “hero” writes a repentant story in which he recounts a life-long pattern of devotion to various deceptive illusions, among which he counts Socialism, Hegelianism, as well as Catholicism and religion in general. The constant reinventions of himself are matched by surprising flexibility of his literary style, which seems to imitate the major voices of Russian classic literature, from Karamzin and Dostoevsky to Turgenev. If we acknowledge that Pecherin’s memoirs are primarily a work of art and only then a source of historically accurate information, many of his apparent contradictions are explained.

 

Natalia Pervukhina, Bryn Mawr College Ph.D. 1986, is Professor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, is author of Anton Chekhov: The Sense and the Nonsense (Legas Publishers, 1993), V.S. Pecherin. Emigrant na vse vremena (Yazyki Slavianskoi Kultury, 2006), Zapiski na pamiat’ (Memoirs of a Russian Life, Pencil Box Press, 2018), and a number of articles on Russian literature and intellectual history.

updated in March 2019

 

Thormann, Janet . 2004. The Jewish Other in Old English Narrative Poetry. Partial Answers 2(1): 1-19. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/244539. Publisher's Version

The thesis of the paper is that Jews are represented in the poetry as the mimetic Other for identification, sponsoring fidelity to faith, the excluded Other allowing consolidation of faith, and the symbolic Other providing a discourse of history as theophany; in representation of the Jewish Other, the Anglo-Saxon textual community furthers the project of nation formation.

January 2004: Born in Brooklyn, New York, Professor Thormann teaches at College of Marin, Kentfield, California. Author of articles on the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle Poems, Old English poetry, Chaucer, Shakespeare, and modern literature, most recently: "The Representation of the Shoah in Maus: History as Psychology," Res Publica 8/2 (2002): 123-139; and "The Ethical Subject of The God of Small Things," Journal for the Psychoanalysis of Culture and Society 8/2, (Fall 2003): 299-307. Coeditor of The Seminar of Moustafa Safouan (New York: Other Press, 2002). Current research: The Aesthetics of Old English poetry.
Shaked, Gershon . 2004. After the Fall: Nostalgia and the Treatment of Authority in the Works of Kafka and Agnon, Two Habsburgian Writers. Partial Answers 2(1): 81-111. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/244542. Publisher's Version

The essay discusses parallels in the work of Franz Kafka and Shmuel Yosef Agnon as writers whose rebellion against tradition and authority was complicated by ambivalent nostalgia for the harmonies of God and Kaiser.

 

 

 

Born in Vienna, Gershon Shaked (1929-2006) was Professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and one of the leading experts on Hebrew literature. 

 

Major works:

   in Hebrew
      Between Laughter and Tears (on Mendele Mokher Sefarim), Tel-Aviv, 1965
      The Hebrew Historical Drama, Jerusalem, 1970
      A New Wave in Modern Hebrew Narrative Fiction, Tel-Aviv, 1971
      The Narrative Art of Agnon, Tel-Aviv, 1973
      Hebrew Narrative Fiction  1880-1980 (Five Volumes) Tel-Aviv, 1977-1998

  in English
     The Shadows Within: Essays on Modern Jewish Writers, Philadelphia,1987
     S. Y. Agnon: A Revolutionary Traditionalist, New-York,1989
     Modern Hebrew Fiction, Bloomington, 2000

      The New Tradition: Essays on Modern Hebrew Literature, 2006

  in German
     Die Macht der Identitaet, Frankfurt, 1986
     Die Geschichte der modernen hebraeschen Literatur, Frankfurt, 1996.

updated in January 2007

 

Stewart, Janice . 2004. 'Locked in a room of one's own?': Querying the Quest for Keys to Woolf's 'Madness'. Partial Answers 2(1): 147-175. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/244544. Publisher's Version

The article is a historiographical against-the-grain reading of archetypal constructions of Virginia Woolf’s “madness.” A genealogical tracing of Woolf’s own testimonials concerning her mental life is juxtaposed with the interpretive analytic specularization of her primary biographers. This new lens exposes the normative reading practices that have produced, simultaneously, both the problematic of Woolf’s “madness” and a near elision of any traces of the conditions of its own production. Woolf’s writing about her “contrary instincts” is examined without searching for underlying pathology; the latter would have amounted to reinscribing Woolf in the institualization of “mental illness.”

January 2004: Author of “Still Crazy after all These Years,” Surfaces. Montreal: Vol.III.16 (1993): 4-10, and forthcoming articles on Freud, Virginia Woolf, Emily Carr, and Radclyffe Hall's The Well of Loneliness.

Feldman, Yael . 2004. From Essentialism to Constructivism? The Gender of Peace and War - Gilman, Woolf, Freud. Partial Answers 2(1): 113-145. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/244543. Publisher's Version

Is there a “natural” fit between gender and the pacifist or military impulse? The article traces the trajectory of the thinking on this issue ever since the initiation of women into the peace movements of nineteenth-century Europe, placing it in the context of the general philosophical shift from essentialism to constructivism. It is argued that the demotion of “the maternal” -- the emblem of pacifism since the early 19th century -- took place in the later work of Virginia Woolf, well before the post-gender heydays of the 1980s. Although the term gender was obviously not available to Woolf, she undermined the conventional division between the sexes through her use of the term androgyny, which prepared her to take on the conventional discourse about aggression, war, and maternal pacifism. A contrastive analysis of the uses and abuses of sexual difference and the maternal metaphor in the works of Woolf and the 19th-century pacifist Charlotte Gilman shows that while amalgamating liberal and radical positions, Woolf’s Three Guineas (1938) in fact anticipated – via its hostile dialogue with Freud – not only the gendering of peace and war but also the contemporary psycho-political analyses of the nexus of sexuality and nationalism.

 

 

January 2004: Yael S. Feldman is the Abraham I. Katsh Professor of Hebrew Culture and Education and Professor of Comparative Literature at NYU, where she teaches Hebrew and Comparative Literature and Gender Theory. She is Associate Editor of the literary journals Prooftexts and Hebrew Studies. The latest of her five books, No Room of Their Own: Gender and Nation in Israeli Women’s Fiction (Columbia University Press, 1999) was a National Jewish Book Awards Finalist. The Hebrew version, Lelo heder mishelahen (Hakkibutz hameuchad, 2002) won the Abraham Friedman Award for Hebrew Literature (2003). Current research: the nexus of politics and psychoanalysis in theories of peace and in Modern Hebrew culture.

 

De Graef, Ortwin . 2004. Encrypted Sympathy: Wordsworth's Infant Ideology. Partial Answers 2(1): 21-51. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/244540. Publisher's Version

This essay proposes to retrace some aspects of the “ethical turn” that affects the humanities today to the codification of “sympathy” in what Geoffrey Hartman has described as Wordsworth’s “rhetoric of community.” Focusing on the figure of the infant in Wordsworth’s Salisbury Plain poems, the essay argues for a recovery in Wordsworth’s text of the critique of sympathy accompanying the ideology of sympathy of which he has become a canonical representative. While the ideology of sympathy typically denies the difference sympathy is said to celebrate, Wordsworth’s text is read here as a timely record of this defensive encryption inviting resistance to the current privatization of sympathy as surrogate justice.

Ortwin de Graef is Professor of English Literature and Literary Theory at KU Leuven. He is the author of two books on Paul de Man and has published widely on Romantic and post-Romantic writing ranging from Wordsworth, Tennyson, Browning, Arnold, and George Eliot through Virginia Woolf and Pearl S. Buck to Hafid Bouazza and Alan Warner. His principal research interests are the Very-Long-Nineteenth-Century ideologies of sympathy, science, and the State reflected and refracted through the transmission technologies of the literary.

 

Updated March 5, 2014