Diacritics

ISSN: 0300-7162

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  1.  1
    Images >> Yevgen Samborsky and the Art of Possibility.Oliver Aas - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (4):101-115.
    Yevgen Samborsky is a multihyphenate, whose work spans not only painting but also video work, installation, and community-based creative projects. His visual language is entirely intermedial: he draws on photography, graffiti, hyperrealism, and internet machine aesthetics. His indebtedness to the digital image has been particularly strong in the last two years, which he has spent watching the news from back home on his com­puter. He has taken pictures of destroyed cultural institutions like the Kharkiv Art Museum or the Odessa Museum (...)
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  2. Underwater with the Feminist Waves: Black Gender and Oceanic Lifeworlds in Rivers Solomon’s The Deep.Yanbing Er - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (4):60-77.
    This essay stages an intervention in perhaps the most influential story about feminism—that of its progressive waves—such that its discursive legacy becomes reconfigured by modalities of racial capitalism. Moving past the familiar image of surface waves crashing on the shore, the essay considers the oblique presence of the internal wave as a renewed paradigm for narrating feminism, especially as an oceanic manifestation that has evaded the grasp of human perception. It offers a close reading of Rivers Solomon’s 2019 novella The (...)
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  3. Synecdoche, Articulation, and Abortion.Mia Cecily Florin-Sefton - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (4):36-58.
    “Can the very essence of a political issue, an issue like say, abortion, hinge on the structure of a figure?” This essay reposes the question—first articulated by Barbara Johnson in 1986—and examines the function of synecdoche within contemporary abortion discourse in the U.S. Reading across a diverse archive, including signs, billboards, placards, and novels, I show that across anti-abortion and pro-abortion rhetoric, the reproductive body, the womb, and the figure of the “the unborn” function as synecdoches that repeatedly articulate the (...)
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  4.  2
    Futurity and Finitude in the Canso de la crozada.Geneviève Young - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (4):80-100.
    This essay reads the thirteenth-century Old Occitan epic Canso de la crozada through Jean-Luc Nancy’s theories of community and communal mythologies. Through its analysis of the Canso ’s unfinished manuscript decorations and the presence of two politically opposed poets, the essay shows that the creation of myth in the chansons de geste is the result of historical desires. In so doing, this essay also expands the theoretical world of Nancy’s readings of the “communal,” and provides a frame for theorizing his (...)
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  5.  1
    Fungorum More: The Concept of Interdependence from Hobbes to Butler.Federico Zappino & Brunella Casalini - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (4):8-34.
    The Hobbesian state of nature revolves around the metaphor of men having grown mushroom-like, fungorum more. This metaphor obscures the generative power of the mother and thus the human condition of dependence. Confronting this phantasmatic imaginary and identifying an alternative to it is one central goal in contemporary feminist thought, as exemplified in particular by Judith Butler’s political philosophy. Contemporary myco-logical studies of the real life of fungi and their ability to construct a true “wood-wide web” help facilitate a different (...)
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  6.  10
    Images >> Good Hope.Carla Liesching - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (3):111-140.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Images >> Good HopeCarla Liesching Click for larger view View full resolution[End Page 111]Carla Liesching is an interdisciplinary artist working across photography, writing, collage, sculpture, bookmaking, and design. Grounded in experiences growing up in apartheid South Africa, she considers the intersections of representation, knowledge, and power, with a focus on colonial histories and enduring constructions of race and geography. Carla's ongoing project, Good Hope, was published by MACK in (...)
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  7.  19
    Transgender as (Non)-Category: Prediction, Charge, Predicament.Emily McAvan - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (3):32-57.
    In this essay, I look at how biopolitical regimes have emerged over the past few decades to produce what I call a non-category of state-induced vulnerability for gender-diverse populations, premised on the proliferation of automated checkpoints like facial recognition and state legal discourses. Through an analysis of Franz Kafka's novel The Trial, I argue that this constitutes an operational logic unable to respond ethically to the transgender body as corporeally embodied.
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  8.  6
    Bloom's Anxiety 50 Years Later: A Case for Creative Criticism.Steven Minas - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (3):84-110.
    Harold Bloom's The Anxiety of Influence (1973) is now half a century old. Despite being one of the most important contributions to poetic theory in the twentieth century, its formal innovations remain understudied. This essay examines the legacy of The Anxiety of Influence through its relationship to the burgeoning genre of "creative criticism." It looks at the various formal genres that Anxiety draws on, including the fragment, parable, and manifesto, before providing a theory of creative criticism through a reading of (...)
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  9.  13
    Between a Scalpel and a Touch, or, Foucault's Ways of Writing the Dead.Bonnie Sheehey - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (3):8-29.
    This essay draws on Michel Foucault's reflections on his writing practice to develop a reading of his historical inquiries as exercises of what I call "death-writing." Death-writing is a type of writing that is predicated on death, both the death of the past and the death of others, comprising a way of orienting oneself toward the dead. I argue that Foucault mobilizes the theme of death and writing already since his earlier work in the 1970s. As a practice of death-writing, (...)
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  10.  9
    Resisting Attention Economies: Wallace, Voskuil, and the Ethics of Noise.Inge Van de Ven & Ties Van Gemert - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (3):60-80.
    In this essay, we will argue that acts of resistance within "attention economies" take the form of a wager isomorphic to the one delineated by Blaise Pascal in his Pensées. First, we examine the role of relevance in communication, interpretation, and understanding. Second, we turn to Cécile Malaspina's conception of noise, which allows us to grasp the intricate relation between judgment and uncertainty. Next, we exemplify our claim by analyzing David Foster Wallace's The Pale King and J.J. Voskuil's seven-volume series (...)
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  11.  13
    What Does the Pandemic Teach Us About X? Scenes of Banal Pedagogy.Tuomo Alhojärvi - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (2):8-33.
    One does not simply live through a pandemic without learning. That the pandemic teaches us something has emerged as a ubiquitous micronarrative in media, policy, and critical thought. These teachings often combine generic blandness and revelatory hype, and are timed in ways that—amidst the enduring violences of viscous pandemics—can only be misplaced. They are, in other words, banal. Here, I stop at the brink of pandemic lessons to think with the proxemics of this scene. Returning to banality as an articulation (...)
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  12.  13
    Images >> Visual Vertigo: Gaëlle Foray's Homage to the Discarded.Amber Bal - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (2):110-129.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Images >> Visual Vertigo:Gaëlle Foray's Homage to the DiscardedAmber Bal (bio)Gaëlle Foray's artistic style invites renewed meditation upon the two human processes that surround the artwork: first, the metamorphosis of raw materials into aesthetic object at the hands of the artist, and second, the phenomenology of perceiving art. On the side of reception (in other words, the viewer's experience of Foray's works), the artworks demand first to be felt. (...)
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  13.  19
    History as Symphony: Navigating the Archive's Outside in Ginzburg and Berlioz.Ari Hallgrímur Finnsson - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (2):36-56.
    This essay explores the question of the uncertain relationship between historical narratives, the archive, and past reality by drawing links between Carlo Ginzburg's 1976 The Cheese and the Worms, and Hector Berlioz's 1830 Symphonie Fantastique. I suggest that Ginzburg's microhistory provides valuable insight into how a mode of historical scholarship premised on the concept of translation might proceed. The symphony provides an example of translation in the medium of music and, by way of comparison with Ginzburg's text, illuminates how a (...)
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  14.  14
    Figurations of Greed: Marx's Habsucht and Heißhunger.M. Gail Hamner - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (2):58-82.
    This essay experiments with the supposition that Christianity's seven deadly sins can be seen to constellate the affective dynamism at the heart of capitalist forms. Through a close reading of two terms used by Marx to index greed— Habsucht and Heißhunger —the essay tracks their performance as figurations that inhere sedimented histories, active contradictions, and filaments of alternative futurities.
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  15.  13
    Dragging and Sweeping: Queer Temporalities of Care for Historical Debris.Rachel Silverbloom - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (2):84-106.
    This essay argues that we need practices for tending to what has been discarded as "historical debris" in order to generate queer socialities and meanings that refuse the dominant heteronormative, capitalist, and white supremacist privileging of futurity, novelty, and productivity. Artist and city planner Theaster Gates's transformative work takes root in Chicago's South Side, where he has renovated abandoned buildings into dynamic community spaces for celebrating and generating Black history, art, and culture. The essay reads Gates's artistic-activist practice through Elizabeth (...)
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  16.  40
    The Strange and the Stranger (1958): Translated and Introduced by Michael Portal.Maurice Blanchot & Michael Portal - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (1):76-101.
    Maurice Blanchot’s “The Strange and the Stranger” (1958) is an essential text for understanding Blanchot’s thought, its development, and its enduring importance. He presents an early account of the impersonal “neuter” in subject-less experiences like “alienation,” “alteration,” “dispersion,” “disappearance,” and “absence.” These experiences of strangeness threaten thought, which is only “itself and for-itself its own experience.” Relatedly, they also reveal “the neutrality of being or neutrality as being.” With reference to both Emmanuel Levinas and Martin Heidegger, Blanchot clarifies the meaning (...)
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  17.  27
    Images >> Quan Zhou Wu and Linaje’s Genealogy.Julia Haeyoon Chang - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (1):5-106.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Images >> Quan Zhou Wu and Linaje’s GenealogyJulia Haeyoon Chang (bio) Click for larger view View full resolutionQuan Zhou WuENJOY (Linaje 2024)Art and design by Quan Zhou WuDigital infrastructure by Marco Fratini[End Page 5] Click for larger view View full resolutionQuan Zhou WuUNA DE ELLAS (Linaje 2024)Art and design by Quan ZhouWu Digital infrastructure by Marco Fratini[End Page 6] Click for larger view View full resolutionQuan Zhou WuMEMORIAS RETORCIDAS(Linaje (...)
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  18.  19
    Language, Soil, and “Jewish” Alienation in Levinas and Adorno.Edmund Chapman - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (1):50-73.
    Emmanuel Levinas and Theodor Adorno are both post-Shoah philosophers who experienced refugeedom. In different contexts, both discuss the question of a linkage between language and soil, and ultimately show that the distinction between the native and the foreign is untenable. I suggest that Levinas’s evocation of linguistic soil illustrates his understanding of Jewishness as defined by a ceding of ground, thus showing that Levinas’s thought relies on a conception of ground in order to then reject it. Adorno, in evoking a (...)
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  19.  32
    Time After (Postfeminist) Time: Gender, Capital, and Helen Phillips’s The Need.Greg Forter - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (1):8-29.
    This essay reads Helen Phillips’s extraordinary novel of motherhood, The Need (2019), alongside recent theorists of post-politics. Phillips’s novel is illuminating because it reveals how an adequate understanding of the post-political requires supplementing current accounts with the categories of gender and heterogeneous time. The Need subverts the postfeminist articulation of politics as an arena in which “feminism” is practicable only in preemptively curtailed and diminished form. It does so by cracking open the “reality” enforced by neoliberal motherhood to show how (...)
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  20.  27
    Freely Espousing: James Schuyler, Surveillance Poetry, and the Queer Otic.R. Morris Levine - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (1):32-48.
    Amidst the “lavender scare” of the Cold War, James Schuyler, “the great queer voice of the New York School,” subverted the state’s auditory surveillance of queer life. Refunctionalizing its tools of espionage as poetic tactics, Schuyler eavesdrops on errant conversations (the espoused) and joining (espousing) them in paratactic assembly. In so doing, Schuyler expands José Esteban Muñoz’s “queer optic,” the utopian capacity to see beauty amidst ruins, beyond the visual into a queer otic that drags into being a world of (...)
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  21.  28
    Linaje.Quan Zhou Wu - 2023 - Diacritics 51 (1):7-7.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:LinajeQuan Zhou WuWith “Linaje,” I wanted to explore the fine line between fiction and lies. Fantasy.I attended a workshop on embuste flamenco with artist Mateo Chica in Villanueva del Rosario. Mateo said that embuste is art, “that lie associated with oral flamenco, which is transmitted with a sort of distraction from real time, to be able to immerse oneself in a fun fiction, that leads to another possible place.”Mateo (...)
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