Renouncing relations and the amputated identity
Sunday, May 5th, 2013
Of everything we’ve read this semester, I have to admit that Middlesex has been the least gripping for me. Maybe it’s the pace, Cal’s voice, switching from “Angles in America,” predominantly dialogue, to lengthy prose, or maybe it’s something in me–my disintegrated family, my hurting heart–that makes it the wrong book to read at the […]
Renouncing relations and the amputated identity
Tags: alliance, Family, Identity, Jeffrey Eugenides, kinship, Middlesex, self
Posted in May 7, Sophia Curran | No Comments »
What a Repressive Discourse Looks Like
Monday, March 4th, 2013
T. Griswold Comstock’s “Alice Mitchell of Memphis” is a consummate depiction of what Foucault calls “a psychiatrization of perverse pleasure” because of its intense analysis of Mitchell in the context of her family history, mental behavior from observation, and the emphasis on seeking information for medical preservation (Foucault, 105). Comstock’s unique selection in his writings […]
What a Repressive Discourse Looks Like
Tags: alliance, medicalization, perversion
Posted in Kwame K. Ocran, March 5 | 1 Comment »