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pro vyhledávání: '"Christina Zwarg"'
Autor:
Christina Zwarg
In a new account of the relationship between Margaret Fuller and Ralph Waldo Emerson, Christina Zwarg recreates a feminist conversation that has gone unheard. In Zwarg's view, the intimate, yet restrained, letters between the two writers are most sig
Autor:
Christina Zwarg
Publikováno v:
The Archive of Fear
“Interlude” aligns Mesmer’s “crisis state” with Freud’s 1909 discussion of the interrupted lecture. Intended to explain psychoanalysis to an America audience, Freud’s analogy also informs the psychological insights Douglass engages when
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::f85ef4c85b25654773bd25fe65ad2103
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.003.0003
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.003.0003
Autor:
Christina Zwarg
Stowe learned from Douglass about the preemptive violence that could be generated through emotional relays and Chapter 2 shows how her second abolitionist novel Dred recasts The Confessions of Nat Turner through her unique use of the mesmeric crisis.
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::17c88450324cba1093c408c2b18c3eb6
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.003.0004
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.003.0004
Autor:
Christina Zwarg
Publikováno v:
The Archive of Fear
Reading John Brown together with Black Reconstruction, Chapter 3 exposes the join of psychological and material concerns that Du Bois learns from Douglass. The anarchistic energy that Du Bois adopts to describe Brown is best articulated in Walter Ben
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::ee1d095ceb2c8d41e17a53bd5f5b936e
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.003.0005
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.003.0005
Autor:
Christina Zwarg
Publikováno v:
The Archive of Fear
Chapter 1 shows Douglass increasingly sensitive to the way that abolition turned democracy into a traumatic genre for those in power. Seeking the elusive “thing” to be abolished for emancipation to be achieved, Douglass reworks the affiliation of
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::95c02905fb1ed9501ddbf9321a586714
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.003.0002
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.003.0002
Autor:
Christina Zwarg
Not about Haiti but about the haunting power of its revolution, The Archive of Fear explores the traumatic force field that continued to inflect U.S. discussions of slavery and abolition both before and after the Civil War, sometimes with surprising
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::4926629d192e59505ceae061b56bec4e
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.001.0001
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.001.0001
Autor:
Christina Zwarg
Publikováno v:
The Archive of Fear
Du Bois borrows the idea of the interrupted lecture to develop his case study of Andrew Johnson in Black Reconstruction. Johnson represents the type of man that John Brown did not expect to find in the slave-holding world: someone who began his polit
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::627e96dcfd193c6da8d60cd20b5b601d
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.003.0006
https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866299.003.0006
Autor:
Christina Zwarg
Focusing on U.S. slavery and its aftermath in the nineteenth century, The Archive of Fear explores the traumatic force field that continued to inflect discussions of slavery and abolition both before and after the Civil War. It challenges the long-as
Autor:
Christina Zwarg
This chapter updates psychoanalytic concerns already identified in Poe with the temporal dimension of trauma theory known as Nachträglichkeit. First translated by Freud’s editor James Strachey as “deferred action,” this important concept is no
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::083b6180f5c07dfbe69d737824095c97
https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190641870.013.44
https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190641870.013.44
Autor:
Christina Zwarg
Publikováno v:
American Literature. 87:23-50
When mesmerism first came to this hemisphere by way of St. Domingue, a complex association between radical abolition and the new science was born. Harriet Beecher Stowe takes up that association in her second abolitionist novel Dred. In so doing she