Monthly Archives: April 2013

The Art of Everyday Life and Death: Throbbing Gristle and the Aesthetics of Neoliberalism

Gregory Steirer University of Pennsylvania steirer@english.upenn.edu Abstract This essay examines the influence of Situationist thought on aesthetics in postwar Britain through a close analysis of Throbbing Gristle, a fine-arts-cum-pop group responsible for the invention of the dystopian subculture Industrial Culture. Framing the group’s work as a response to the politics of 1970s Social Art, the […]

Cage’s Mesostics and Saussure’s Paragrams as Love Letters

Sean Braune (bio) York Universitysbraune@yorku.ca  Abstract John Cage’s poetry is often analyzed in relation to conceptual writing and constraint, making Cage seem particularly absent. This essay argues that the conceptual writing found in “62 Mesostics re Merce Cunningham” is not devoid of emotion. Quite the contrary, the mesostics become the equivalent of a love letter. By […]

From Stenotype to Tintype: C.D. Wright’s Technologies of “Type”

Jennie Berner (bio)University of Illinois, Chicagojennieberner@hotmail.com Abstract  C.D. Wright’s engagement with documentary technology—stenography in Deepstep Come Shining and tintype photography in One Big Self—reveals a contradictory impulse in her poetry: to document individualized data while abstracting this data into “type.” Wright uses this contradiction to underline the incommensurability of two literary discourses in Deepstep Come […]

The Most Dangerous Place: Pro-Life Politics and the Rhetoric of Slavery

Lisa Guenther (bio)Vanderbilt Universitylisa.guenther@vanderbilt.edu Abstract In recent years, comparisons between abortion and slavery have become increasingly common in American pro-life politics. Some have compared the struggle to extinguish abortion rights to the struggle to end slavery. Others have claimed that Roe v Wade is the Dred Scott of our time. Still others have argued that […]

Curbside Quarantine: A Scene of Interspecies Mediality

Max Cavitch (bio)University of Pennsylvaniacavitch@english.upenn.edu  Fig. 1. Stills from “Pit Bull attacking little dog on streets of NYC.” MissWooHoo11. Youtube. 27 Jun. 2012. Web. 13 Dec. 2012. Blogs, news Web sites, and content aggregators of all kinds feed a vast stream of stories about domesticated animals ostensibly “gone wild.” The Huffington Post even has a […]

“Kenosha, WI”

Rory Ferreira (bio)St. Norbert Collegerory.ferreira@snc.edu I started writing raps seriously when my friend Robert drowned buck naked in a public pool. Like any self-absorbed, depressed-for-no-reason 19 year old, I was reading Camus, and the absurdity he talks about became, rather suddenly, all too real. This happened a year ago and resulted in the creation of […]

2012 Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival (May 10-20 2012)

Patty Ahn (bio)USC School of Cinematic Artspahn@usc.edu   In May of 2012, Visual Communications hosted its 28th annual Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival (LAAPFF), offering ten days filled with feature-length films, short programs, panels, and social events that formed a cross-section of the current state of Asian American media. Visual Communications (VC), a Los […]

Digital Theory, Inc.: Knowledge Work and Labor Economics

Carol Colatrella (bio)Georgia Institute of Technologycarol.colatrella@lcc.gatech.edu Review of Katie King, Networked Reenactments: Stories Transdisciplinary Knowledges Tell, Durham: Duke UP, 2011, Rob Wilkie, The Digital Condition: Class and Culture in the Information Network, New York: Fordham UP, 2011.  Over the past year, faculty members in my interdisciplinary department at Georgia Tech responded to the request by […]

Political Realism and the Cultural Imaginary

Graham Hammill (bio)University at Buffalo, SUNYghammill@buffalo.edu Review of Filippo del Lucchese, Conflict, Power, and Multitude in Machiavelli and Spinoza: Tumult and Indignation. New York: Continuum, 2009.   Filippo del Lucchese’s Conflict, Power, and Multitude in Machiavelli and Spinoza is a welcome addition to the growing collection of scholarly works that firmly place Spinoza in a […]

Moraru’s Cosmodernism

Damjana Mraovic-O’Hare (bio)damjana.mraovic@case.edu Case Western Reserve University Review of Christian Moraru, Cosmodernism: American Narrative, Late Globalization, and the New Cultural Imaginary. Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P, 2011. Print.  The critical discourse about postmodernism has recently taken a turn toward declarations that postmodernism is dead, finished, past. The aftermath of 9/11 and the trend of […]

Notes on Contributors

Patty Ahn is a Ph.D. Candidate in Critical Studies at USC’s School of Cinematic Arts. Her research interests include critical histories and theories of U.S. television, transnational media studies with a regional focus on the Pacific Rim, gender and sexuality, and sound and popular music. She has been published in Spectator, European Journal of Cultural […]