Critical Essays Archive

The Feminism of Women’s Zen Buddhist Memoirs

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As I’ve read more Buddhist biographies and memoirs, I’ve begun to notice how women seeking spiritual meaning have been forced to endure the added burden of their gender.

List-Making at the End of the World

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In apocalyptic stories, lists seem to provide characters and writers with a sense of control.

Female Agency in Dystopian Novels

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Recent novels by Leni Zumas and Naomi Alderman reimagine the fate of female agency with the urgency of our time.

Revisiting Joyce Maynard’s At Home in the World

This memoir of nineteen-year-old Maynard’s relationship with fifty-three-year-old JD Salinger is a nuanced exploration of power dynamics in a relationship, and an important #MeToo read.

The Language of Trauma in Kevin Goodan’s Anaphora

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Kevin Goodan seizes on the persistent remembering that characterizes PTSD in his new book, creating an elegy that develops a kind of poetic logic of the fear system.

The Complicated Radicalism of Emily Wilson’s The Odyssey

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While a woman translating Homer’s epic is certainly a huge milestone, Wilson’s interpretation is a radical, fascinating achievement regardless of her gender.

Harassment and Linguistic Inquiry in Milkman

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Anna Burns’s novel, winner of the 2018 Man Booker Prize, centers on unwanted sexual attention in an environment where safety is already not only unlikely, but impossible.

The World of Yesterday’s Documentation of the Great Wars

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Stefan Zweig’s autobiography serves as a poignant warning as the world grapples with the rise of ethno-nationalism.

An Epidemic of Violence in Destroy All Monsters

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Early in Jeff Jackson’s latest novel, the media reports on a new kind of epidemic that is spreading across America: musicians in rock bands are being shot while performing live on stages of small music venues. What follows is a work that, in its lack of answers, serves as

The Resurgence of the Witch’s Tale

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Witch-hunting, Silvia Federici has written, developed in a world where communal relations were crumbling under the emergence of capitalism; from that moment on, the witch was the woman who escaped and defied patriarchal authority—and for this, she has always had to be punished.