
Hillis Miller (in Reading Inside Out: Interviews and Conversations, by J. Isn't It a Beautiful Day? An Interview with J.Writing Briefly about Really Big Things.Toward a Theory of the Megatext: Speculative Criticism and Richard Grossman's "Breeze Avenue Working Paper".Then Out of the Rubble: The Apocalypse in David Foster Wallace's Early Fiction (in Studies in the Novel).Then Out of the Rubble: David Foster Wallace's Early Fiction (in DFW and "The Long Thing").The Inverted Nuke in the Garden: Archival Emergence and Anti-Eschatology in David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest.The Function of Videogame Criticism, review of How to Talk about Videogames, by Ian Bogost.Review: Consider David Foster Wallace: Critical Essays.Hillis Miller’s Thinking Literature across Continents Reading Now and Again: Hyperarchivalism and Democracy in Ranjan Ghosh and J.Poetics of Control, review of The Interface Effect, by Alexander R.Mobile Games, SimCity BuildIt, and Neoliberalism.Metaproceduralism: The Stanley Parable and the Legacies of Postmodern Metafiction.Is an Archive Enough?: Megatextual Debris in the Work of Rachel Blau DuPlessis.Geologies of Finitude: The Deep Time of Twenty-First-Century Catastrophe in Don DeLillo’s Point Omega and Reza Negarestani’s Cyclonopedia.Eternal, Shiny, and Chrome: The Fabulous Capitalist Megadisasters of the 2010s.Apocalypse Networks: Representing the Nuclear Archive.Henry Fountain, “Climate Change Is Accelerating, Bringing World ‘Dangerously Close’ to Irreversible Change.” Kristin George Bagdanov, “Addressing the Atomic Specter: Ginsberg’S ‘Plutonian Ode’ and America’s Nuclear Unconscious.”Īlyssa Battistoni, “Why Naomi Klein Has Been Right.” Kramer, “US Officials Suspect New Nuclear Missile in Explosion That Killed Seven Russians.” Mary Hudetz, “US Official: Research Finds Uranium in Navajo Women, Babies.”ĭavid E. McNeil Jr., “Wuhan Coronavirus Looks Increasingly Like a Pandemic, Experts Say” (February 20, 2020). 1” up sometime soon(er than nine months from now. I hope to have “Links in the Time of Coronavirus, Vol. So, to catch up: here’s links from late summer 2019–Mathat are, by the very nature of posting them now, rather outdated/anachronistic, a window onto a world that is gone yet still all too present (and excessive), a world that most certainly wasn’t going in the direction of human flourishing and that any nostalgia for may be misplaced.


last summer (!), nine months before the global pandemic was declared. A lot of stuff was going on for me this year, both personally and professionally, so I haven’t really had a chance to post links since.
