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Dissecting Dickinson: My wheel is in the dark!
My wheel is in the dark!I cannot see a spoke Yet I know its dripping feetGo round and round. My foot is on the Tide!An unfrequented road –Yet have all roads A clearing at the end – Some have resigned the Loom – Some in the busy tomb Find quaint employ – Some with new Continue reading
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The Walt Whitman series: Song of Myself. Part 1/3
Why Whitman’s Song of Myself? There is no poem like Song of Myself. Nowhere in literary history does one find such extraordinary originality, reinvention of language, and baffling aesthetic merit as in Song of Myself. Yet, Whitman is still to this day both misunderstood and critically undervalued. This issue is part one of three issues Continue reading
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Defending The Western Canon
It is a tragic realisation that most colleges and universities in the West have gone away from studying, inquiring, and appreciating the importance and stunning beauty of the Western Canon, which, after all, is the backbone of our society — our birth certificate, if you will. Instead the oppression of our most significant authors (see Continue reading
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Nabokov’s: ‘Lolita’ and a problem with the modern reader
It can be easy in these troubled and confused political times to dismiss Lolita, and effectively Nabokov, just as literary greats such as Neruda, Twain, Tolstoy, Harper Lee, and I have seen even Joseph Conrad among many others, being rather ridiculously subjected to what philosopher Richard Rorty calls a, “subversive, oppositional discourse…” echoing rather apocalyptically Continue reading
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A short piece on 21st century literature and Owen Wister’s: The Virginian
In ‘The Virginian’ you have the genesis to all fiction written in the 20th century within the realm of the ‘Western’ genre. It is a novel that is as ‘heroic’ as it is at times romantic, and intensely ‘Southern’; yet, there is a depth and wit to it that comes across both loyal, and indebted Continue reading
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François Rabelais: Gargantua and Pantagruel
While many have read (and studied) French literary giants such as Montaigne, Molière, Flaubert, Rimbaud, Baudelaire, Proust, etc. it is easy to forget that there is a single pioneer within the French language (and in literary history in general) who came before them all, and who, like Chaucer is for Shakespeare, and the English literary Continue reading
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Erasmus: In Praise Of Folly
Praise Of Folly is a satirical project worthy of Pope and Rabelais. Like Pope, Erasmus in his philosophical essay attacks several aspects of human existence, and I think especially in the age of what prof. Harold Bloom has labeled ‘The School Of Resentment’, Erasmus some 500 years before, was in agreement: “Now for the charge Continue reading
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Dissecting Dickinson: The Guest is gold and crimson
The Guest is gold and crimson – An Opal guest and gray – Of Ermine is his doublet – His Capuchin gay – He reaches town at nightfall – He stops at every door – Who looks for him at morning I pray him too – explore The Lark’s pure territory – Or the Lapwing’s Continue reading
