Comparative Literature
@CompLit_Journal
Comparative Literature is one of the official journals of the American Comparative Literature Association. The oldest journal in its field in the United States,
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From the archive, read Shu-mei Shih's “Decolonizing US Comparative Literature: The 2022 ACLA Presidential Address”: doi.org/10.1215/001041…
From the archives: Check out this essential special issue on "The Literature of Socialist Anti-Racisms," introduced by Anindita Banerjee and Gabriella Safran. —Download the introduction and explore the full issue now: doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Ben Hutchinson's "Two Aspects of Language, Two Types of Comparison: Toward a Rhetoric of Comparative and World Literature" offers a perceptive rereading of Roman Jakobson's distinction between metaphoric and metonymic. doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Juliette Taylor-Batty's "“Je est un autre”: Beckett’s Not I, Rimbaud, and Synesthesia" reveals the significant intertextual links between Beckett’s play and Rimbaud’s poem, “Voyelles.” doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Check out Lara Norgaard's nuanced reading of a Brazilian short story - "Plausible Intimacies: Transpacific Entanglements in Lima Barreto’s “O homem que sabia javanês.”" doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Scott Newman's ““Limitless Black Resonance”: The Grotesque Sonority of Dambudzo Marechera and Sony Labou Tansi" - an exciting contribution to postcolonial literary criticism and sound studies. doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Mariajosé Rodríguez-Pliego's "The Border Underground: Indigenous Cosmovisions in the Migration Narratives of Leslie Marmon Silko and Yuri Herrera" explores how novels materialize colonial history and lay out prophecies for the end of our present world. doi.org/10.1215/001041…
David Quint's "Epic Futurity: The Phaeacians, Carthage, and the Tradition" offers a groundbreaking view on the historical dialectic in the genre of epic. doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Natasha Tanna's "The Politics of Plagiarism: Queer Appropriation and Collaborative Creation in Ena Lucía Portela and María Moreno" brilliantly analyzes the intertextual works of Cuban and Argentine writers. doi.org/10.1215/001041…
The season for special issue proposals has arrived at Comparative Literature! Please see the submissions section of our website for details. read.dukeupress.edu/.../pages/Subm…
Nergis Ertürk, “Vâlâ Nureddin’s Comic Materialism and the Sexual Revolution: Writing across Turkey and the Soviet Union” (Volume 73, Issue 3) Link: doi.org/10.1215/001041…
César Domínguez, “Rebuilding a Profession: A Bibliometric Analysis of the Linguistic Culture of Comparative Literature in the United States and Spain” (Volume 73, Issue 3) Link: doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Morgane Cadieu, “Afterword: The Littoral Museum of the Twenty-First Century" (Volume 73, Issue 2: Beaches and Ports) Link: doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Maxwell Uphaus, “‘The Chalk Wall Falls to the Foam’: Reimagining Littoral Space in the Poetry of the Dover Cliffs" (Volume 73, Issue 2) Link: doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Sarah Ann Wells, “At the Shores of Work” (Volume 73, Issue 2: Beaches and Ports) Link: doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Hannah Freed-Thall, “Beaches and Ports” (Volume 73, Issue 2: Beaches and Ports) Link: doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Katrin Pahl’s review of Barbara Nagel’s new book looks at #MeToo as a moment that exposed ambivalence and rape culture, showing how Nagel analyzes that ambiguity in both German realism and ordinary life. Comparative Literature (2021) 73 (1): 125–129. doi.org/10.1215/001041…
David Quint analyses how the Thousand and One Nights stages the relationship of the reader to fictitious lives of others as a power relationship and in terms of estrangement and identification. Comparative Literature (2021) 73 (1): 110–124. doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Sunayani Bhattacharya presents a mode of reading Bankim and the nineteenth-century Bengali novel in relation to the British Victorian novel while highlighting the influence of Sanskrit aesthetic theories. Comparative Literature (2021) 73 (1): 84–109. doi.org/10.1215/001041…
Gabriele Lazzari argues that Somali diasporic literature places the border at its imaginative and symbolic core, to articulate more historically conscious modes of belonging to place and language. Comparative Literature (2021) 73 (1): 61–83. bit.ly/33jx4u6
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