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On Magic Realism in Film

Critical Inquiry 12 (2):301-325 (1986)

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  1. The Powers of the False: Reading, Writing, Thinking Beyond Truth and Fiction.Doro Wiese - 2014 - Northwestern University Press.
    Can literature make it possible to represent histories that are otherwise ineffable? Making use of the Deleuzian concept of “the powers of the false,” Doro Wiese offers readings of three novels that deal with the Shoah, with colonialism, and with racialized identities. She argues that Jonathan Safran Foer’s Everything Is Illuminated, Richard Flanagan’s Gould’s Book of Fish, and Richard Powers’s The Time of Our Singing are novels in which a space for unvoiced, silent, or silenced difference is created. Seen through (...)
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  • The Last Western’s Missing Piece. [REVIEW]Jen Hedler Phillis - 2015 - Mediations 29 (1).
    Jen Hedler Phillis reviews Paul Stasi's and Jennifer Greiman's The Last Western:Deadwood and the End of American Empire.
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  • Jameson Among the Contras: Third-World Culture, Neoliberal Globalization, and the Latin American Connection.James Christie - 2015 - Mediations 29 (1).
    Historicizing Fredric Jameson’s seminal “Third-World Literature and Multinational Capital,” James Christie identifies Jameson’s concrete involvement with the struggles of the embattled Latin-American Left as the source of the relevance of Jameson’s theory of third-world literature to the later emergence of neoliberal globalization, which originates in mutations in the structure of U.S. imperialism that date from the time of the “Third World Literature” essay.
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  • Antigone Becomes Jocasta: Soha Bechara, Résistante, and Incendies.Jim Holstun - 2015 - Mediations 29 (1).
    What happens when the memoirs of Soha Bechara, a Lebanese revolutionary, become the raw materials for a late-symbolist playwright? Bechara, her fellow militants, and the interviewers and documentarians who have focused on them produce a complex realist narrative of communist resistance to Lebanese sectarianism and Israeli occupation. But by turning Soha Bechara into Nawal Marwan, Wajdi Mouawad and the culture industry turn an eloquent, militant Antigone into a catatonic, ill-fated Jocasta.
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