Textual Practice 10.3, Volume 10, Issue 3Alan Sinfield Volume 10, Issue 3- Papers include: Tragedy and the nationalist condition of criticism "Thomas Doucherty"--Descartes, Baudrillard, Dryden and a consideration of cultural relations between England and France in the late seventeenth century.ILaodamia and the moaning of Mary "John" "Barrell"--changing critical responses to Wordsworth's "heroic version of masculinity." Melodrama as Avant-garde: enacting a new subjectivity "Simon Shepherd"--nineteenth-century English radicals and translations of French melodrama. The diasporic imaginary: theorizing the Indian diaspora "Vijay Mishra;" Bisexuality, heterosexuality and wishful theory "Jonathan Dollimore. Reviews, index. Holcroft ""IA Tale of Mystery, --a melo-drame" and ICaleb Williams. |
Contents
theorizing the Indian diaspora | 421 |
Laodamia and the moaning of Mary | 449 |
Tragedy and the nationalist condition of criticism | 479 |
enacting a new subjectivity | 507 |
Bisexuality heterosexuality and wishful theory | 523 |
Reviews | 541 |
Paul Virilio The Art of the Motor | 546 |
The Aesthetics of Modernity | 549 |
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aesthetic appears argues argument attempts avant-garde become bisexual body border called Cambridge claim complex condition consciousness construction Corneille criticism cultural death described desire difference discourse Dryden early effect emergence English Essay example fact feeling figure final French Haydon heroic heterosexuality homeland idea identification identity important Indian diaspora instance kind language Laodamia late later Laure linguistic lives London Marxism masculinity means modern narrative nation-state nationalist nature never object once original particular perhaps person play poem political position possible postmodern practice precisely present Protesilaus question Quincey radical reason recently relation relationship remains represented response Routledge seems seen sense sexual social space speak specific suggests takes terror theatre theoretical theory thing thought University Press wishful woman women Wordsworth writing