12 research outputs found
Willow trees don't weep
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, place and events are either the product of the aucthor's imagination or used fictitiously.276 hlm;20 c
Willow trees don't weep
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, place and events are either the product of the aucthor's imagination or used fictitiously.276 hlm;20 c
Willow trees don't weep
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, place and events are either the product of the aucthor's imagination or used fictitiously.276 hlm;20 c
Reviews/Interviews
Absent Fathers, Outsider Perspectives and Yiddish Typewriters - Norman Ravvin (Concordia University) Talks to Krzysztof Majer (University of 艁贸d藕
Reviews/Interviews
Capital Ellowen Deeowen: A Review of The Making of London: London in Contemporary Literature by Sebastian Groes (Houndsmills: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2011) - Adam Sumera
Deconstruction and Liberation: A Review of Simon Glendinning鈥檚 Derrida (New York: Oxford UP, 2011) - Wit Pietrzak
Authenticity, Transdifference, Survivance: Native American Identity (Un)Masked: A Review of Native Authenticity: Transnational Perspectives on Native American Literary Studies, ed. Deborah L. Madsen (Albany: State U of New York P, 2010) - Monika Kocot
Literature, the Arab Diaspora, Gender and Politics - Fadia Faqir Speaks with Maria Assif
Absent Fathers, Outsider Perspectives and Yiddish Typewriters - Norman Ravvin (Concordia University) Talks to
Krzysztof Majer (University of 艁贸d藕
Prison Israel-Palestine: Literalities of Criminalization and Imaginative Resistance
This article offers a reflection on the Palestinian experience of imprisonment. It begins by addressing the settler logic of criminalization and goes on to identify how this criminalization extends to the systematic thwarting of resistance. In engaging with different kinds of prison writing and art, it further explores the relationship between the literality of imprisonment and the imagination as a question of collective consciousness