- All Issues
- Vol. 8 No. 1 June 2024
- Vol. 7 No. 2 Dec. 2023
- Vol. 7 No. 1 June 2023
- Vol. 6 No. 2 Dec. 2022
- Vol. 6 No. 1 June 2022
- Vol. 5 No. 2 Dec. 2021
- vol. 5 No. 1 June 2021
- vol. 4 No. 2 Dec. 2020
- Vol. 4 No. 1 Jun 2020
- Vol. 3 No. 2 Dec. 2019
- Vol. 3 No. 1 Jun 2019
- Vol. 2 No. 2 Dec. 2018
- Vol. 2 No. 1 Jun 2018
- Vol. 1 No. 1 Dec. 2017
All Issues
- “My Shadow Has Gone Mad”: Irony and Self-Consciousness in Hans Christian Andersen’s The Shadow
Author:Eli Park Sorensen
Abstract: Abstract: Hans Christian Andersen’s international breakthrough as the author of fairytales came during the 1840s. In 1846, Andersen arrived in Italy after a hugely successful but exhausting book tour through several European countries. In Italy, Anderson would write on two works: an autobiography, The True Story of My Life, and a strange—and highly atypical (at least by Andersen’s standards)...
Vol. 3 No. 2 Dec. 2019 Time:2020-01-13 View Citation
- “An Aquatic Reverie” | Mallarmé’s Writing on Water and the Naming of Waves
Author:Clark Lunberry
Abstract: Abstract: At his home outside Paris, in Valvin, Stéphane Mallarmé spent much time on his small boat dreamily sailing upon the Seine, seeing this body of flowing water as a site for inspiration and inscription. Indeed, Mallarmé once confided to a friend, “I no longer write a poem without an aquatic reverie running through it,” and that, for him, poetry was like an “oar stroke,” and the sail,...
Vol. 3 No. 2 Dec. 2019 Time:2020-01-13 View Citation
- Shakespeare and Experimental American Poetry
Author:Alan Golding
Abstract: Abstract: Why the particular emphasis proposed in my title on Shakespeare’s importance for experimental or avant-garde American poetry? We can take Shakespeare’s significance for American poetry generally, as for most writers in the English language, as a given. One can certainly trace Shakespeare’s presence in a wide range of more mainstream twentieth-century poetry, from John Berryman to A...
Vol. 3 No. 2 Dec. 2019 Time:2020-01-13 View Citation
- When Interfaces Interfere: Crashlands, Cancer, and Embodied Gaming
Author:Brian Reed
Abstract: Abstract: In Gameworld Interfaces, Kristine Jørgensen maintains that the best interfaces provide an optimal amount of useful information about a gameworld without becoming obtrusive. Video games are, however, complex objects, and sometimes they serve purposes other than entertaining users through facilitating immersive gameplay. They can, for instance, promote educational and aesthetic ends tha...
Vol. 3 No. 2 Dec. 2019 Time:2020-01-13 View Citation
- What is Migrant Thinking? Trans, Fusion, and the Bracket
Author:Ranjan Ghosh
Abstract: Abstract: This essay introduces Ghosh’s idea of trans(in)fusion and argues out his thesis on “migrant thinking.” What kind of “critical thinking” does trans(in)fusion envisage? Is all envisagement a kind of form? Can critical thinking be envisaged at all? If envisaged, what kind of cosmopolitan and migrant motor does it undertake and initiate? Ghosh talks about the poetics and politics of ...
Vol. 3 No. 2 Dec. 2019 Time:2020-01-13 View Citation
- “Of Rare Compatibility”: Jen Bervin’s Silk Poems and Making Kin in the Sericene
Author:David Perry
Abstract: Abstract: Scripting what may be read as a “string figure” companion to Donna Haraway’s Chthulucene, Jen Bervin’s 2017 Silk Poems project becomes entangled with the damage of the Anthropocene—and with projects of recuperation in the face of that damage—via a proposed Sericene: an ecopoetic weaving of human-worm-moth symbiosis in silk, a human voicing articulated through the nonhuman person...
Vol. 3 No. 2 Dec. 2019 Time:2020-01-13 View Citation
- Notes on Contributors
Author:
Abstract: 2019 vol.3, no. 2 Notes on Contributors
Vol. 3 No. 2 Dec. 2019 Time:2021-06-03 View Citation
- The Shimmering of the Transitory: An Interview with Charles Bernstein. With an Introduction by Lauri Ramey
Author:Fredrik Hertzberg
Abstract: The Shimmering of the Transitory: An Interview with Charles Bernstein. With an Introduction by Lauri Rame
Vol. 2 No. 2 Dec. 2018 Time:2019-07-10 View Citation
- The Community Interpreter’s Latitude for Action: A Triadic Discourse Interpreting Model (TRIM)
Author:Lihua Jiang
Abstract: Sociological communication problems associated with the interpreter’s presence and actions in the community have come into the focus of discussion, leading to such opposing views of the interpreter as a “verbatim” reproducer of messages in another language, on the one hand, or as “advocator,” “cultural broker,” or “conciliator,” on the other hand. This essay aims at exploring the inter...
Vol. 2 No. 2 Dec. 2018 Time:2019-07-10 View Citation
- Concepts, Methods, and Media: Three Keywords for a Historiography of Translation Studies
Author:Yves Gambier
Abstract: The movement of theories belongs both to the history and the sociology of disciplines, especially to their institutionalization. Epistemology should also be added here, though sometimes disguised as the History of Ideas, sometimes labeled as the Philosophy of Science. One of the major paradoxes, or even contradictions, in TS seems to be the double bind of opening borders and establishing limits...
Vol. 2 No. 2 Dec. 2018 Time:2019-07-10 View Citation