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Sharon o dair
Sharon o dair












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 So, to catch up: here’s links from late summer 2019–Mathat are, by the very nature of posting them now, rather outdated/anachronistic, a window onto a world that is gone yet still all too present (and excessive), a world that most certainly wasn’t going in the direction of human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.

sharon o dair sharon o dair

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.














Sharon o dair