Philosophical anthropologist René Girard owes his ideas about mimetic desire to literature.
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René Girard on What Lit Can Teach Us
Posted in Uncategorized Tagged Cynthia Haven, mimetic desire, Rebecca Adams, René Girard, scapegoating, violence Comments closed
To Be Trump’s VP, Leap and Creep
The competition to be Trump’s VP resembles the stick leaping and crawling contest in Lilliput.
Posted in Uncategorized Tagged Donald Trump, Election 2024, GOP, Gulliver's Travels, Jonathan Swift Comments closed
Alice Munro, R.I.P.
Alice Munro, who died yesterday, explored themes of survival in everyday settings.
Does Clockwork Orange Describe Us?
The novella Clockwork Orange captures the process of fascist conditioning, such as we are seeing carried out by Putin on swatches of the GOP.
Posted in Uncategorized Tagged Anthony Burgess, Clockwork Orange, Fascism, Night of the Long Knives, Russian talking points, Vladimir Putin Comments closed
Trump, Stormy, and The Waste Land
The Stormy Daniels-Trump encounter resembles the sordid sex scene found in T.S. Eliot’s “Waste Land.”
Posted in Uncategorized Tagged Donald Trump, Manhattan election interference trial, Stormy Daniels, T.S. Eliot, Waste Land Comments closed
He Took Us with Him to the Heart of Things
Poet’s writing about the Ascension often focus on our tangled lives.
Posted in Uncategorized Tagged "Ascension", "Crown: Ascension", "Sonnet for Ascension Day", Henry Vaughan, John Donne, Malcolm Guite, Tintern Abbey, William Wordsworth Comments closed
A May Sarton Poem for Mother’s Day
A poetic reminder, by May Sarton, to remember the good times we spent with our mothers
Jane Eyre, Teacher of the Month
To honor teachers during Teacher Appreciation Week, I look at teaching as it occurs in “Jane Eyre” and “Villette.”
Posted in Uncategorized Tagged Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre, teachers and teaching, Villette Comments closed
On Gulliver and Biden Putting Out Fires
Disagreeable measures used to combat Covid were like Gulliver pissing on a palace fire to save the structure.
Posted in Uncategorized Tagged Covid, Covid masking, Gulliver's Travels, Jonathan Swift, satire, vaccines Comments closed