TagFeminism

Under the Shadow: Islamic Horror and Shadows of the Djinn

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In the last 25 years, the American media landscape has been flooded by stories of war and conflict in the Middle East. In the perspective of many American spectators, the Middle East is a chaotic and even frightening place full of terrorists and extremism. While such terrors exist in the Middle East, attending to the intersection of colonialism and war can tell a different tale of terror in the...

“Fitting In”: Taking Up Space in the 116th US Congress

A photo of a young Latina woman laughing widely. She wears a white suit and shirt, with a red-and-white button pinned to her lapel; red lipstick; and big gold hoop earrings. Her hair is loos over her shoulders. Other men and women stand in the background, the interior of the House of Representatives

“Next time someone tells Bronx girls to take off their hoops, they can just say they’re dressing like a Congresswoman.”Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) Every year, I make a feminist New Year’s resolution: apologize less; shut down more mansplaining; take up more space. Sometimes I mean this last one literally: I’ve learned to square my shoulders and stake my place in crowded subways, and to...

Revisiting Unruly Instruction

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A cropped scan of the cover of Kathleen Rowe's book Unruly Woman. It features realistic art of a fat blond woman wearing a low-cut sleeveless red dress, pears, and a white fur stole, laughing and leaning in a dominating sexual position over a white man in a white shirt and black tie

This week, we dive into Broadly Textual’s archive, from its days as Metathesis, to revisit a piece of important work by now-Dr. Melissa Welshans. Her post, written in 2014 during her time in the English PhD program, addresses the same issues discussed by Natalie El-Eid in her first contribution this month, and reflected in the poem contribution by Rhyse Curtis last week: how do we navigate a...

New Year, New You … True You?: Reconstructing Identities and Cultural Standards

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A greyscale photo of a pale woman's torso; her sweatpants are pulled low and she measures her hips with a tape measure (a diamond ring is visible on her middle finger)

Welcome to 2019, everyone. With the ushering in of a new year comes the seemingly incessant need for a new “resolution.” But is it really a need? Or are we dealing, rather, with a set of societal norms and the pressure we feel to conform to them? It’s a pressure that’s hard to escape. We’re annually inundated with questions of a New Year’s resolution by strangers and loved ones alike. What, I...

Looking for Sylvia Heschel at the Archive

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A photo of a "Grocery list" on lined paper: in bullets, a list of grocery items fades into a blur toward the bottom of the photo. A pen rests on the paper next to the list.

As I wrote in my previous post, I spent the last week perusing the Abraham Joshua Heschel Papers at Duke University. One of my major goals of the trip was to glean as much information as I could about Sylvia Heschel (nee Straus), Abraham Joshua Heschel’s wife. I knew very little about Sylvia Heschel before going to the archive – I knew she was a concert pianist, but not much more than that. One...

How We Talk about Trauma: Gaslight and the Importance of Maintaining a Bi-focal Critical View

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[7-10 minute read] Recently, my coursework on Hollywood Melodrama engaged me with reading portions of Helen Hanson’s book, Hollywood Heroines: Women in Film Noir and the Female Gothic Film.[1] This text represents an amazing work of scholarship, connecting well-researched critical feminist histories, studies in the formation of literary and filmic genres, and close-readings of the narrative...

Scholarship and Affect: Merging Critical and Fan Identities

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[7-10 minute read] Take an adventure with me through my affective and critical experiences with a few texts I encountered during my first year and a half of my Ph.D. program: ***** I am sitting in the theatre in the last showing of the night for Star Wars: Rogue One. I have just come from my house where I have been drinking a bit of wine with friends. I am happily relaxed after a rather arduous...

Monster and Men Part II: Healing Toxic Masculinity, Disney’s new Beast

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!Spoilers for Disney’s new live-action Beauty and the Beast follow! Last week, I discussed Gaston from Disney’s new live-action version of Beauty and the Beast. I was interested in how the film makes space to complicate Gaston’s character while opening into a discussion concerning trauma and scenes of toxic masculinity. This week, I’d like to talk about the new Beast from this latest film, and...

Monsters and Men Part I: Gaston, Trauma, and Toxic Masculinity

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!Spoilers for Disney’s new live-action Beauty and the Beast follow! Gaston rears his fist back, he’s intent on striking the man in front of him, Belle’s father, who has just said that Belle will never be with him. This is the most glaring example of his raging temper up to this point in the narrative. But LeFou is there, stepping between them, holding his hands up as one might approach a snarling...

Part II: Wicked Women and the Negotiation of Female (Dis)empowerment

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“Not only did she dupe me into believing she still loved me, she actually forced me to implicate myself. Wicked, wicked girl. I almost laughed. Good Lord, I hated her, but you had to admire the bitch.” – Nick Dunne Gone Girl, (Flynn 345) [1] The majority of Gone Girl’s masterful storytelling depends on Flynn’s fascinating, journalistic style of characterization and description, a thriller’s...

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