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To Name the Bigger Lie
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 304

To Name the Bigger Lie

Part coming-of-age story, part psychological thriller, part philosophical investigation, this unforgettable memoir traces the ramifications of a series of lies that threaten to derail the author’s life—exploring the line between truth and deception, fact and fiction, and reality and conspiracy. Sarah’s story begins as she’s researching what she believes will be a book about her high school philosophy teacher, a charismatic instructor who taught her and her classmates to question everything—in the end, even the reality of historical atrocities. As she digs into the effects of his teachings, her life takes a turn into the fantastical when her wife, Marta, is notified that she’s bee...

Mine
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 176

Mine

Winner of the 2020 Great Lakes Colleges Association New Writers Award for Creative Non-fiction Longlisted for the PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay 2019 Lambda Literary Award Finalist for Lesbian Memoir/Biography Silver Winner for Essays in 2018 Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Awards This is a book about ownership. It begins with an essay about being given a man's furniture while he's on trial for murder and follows with essays that question corporeal, familial, and intellectual forms of ownership. What does it mean to believe that a hand, or a child, or a country, or a story belongs to you? What happens if you realize you're wrong? Mining her own life and those of others, Sarah Viren considers the contingencies of ownership alongside the realities of loss in this debut essay collection.

A Harp in the Stars
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 309

A Harp in the Stars

Randon Billings Noble has collected a range of lyric essays in a variety of forms that showcase the essay’s openness to experimentation, reliance on authentic voice, and potential to explore complex subject matter.

To Name the Bigger Lie
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 304

To Name the Bigger Lie

Part coming-of-age story, part psychological thriller, part philosophical investigation, this unforgettable memoir traces the ramifications of a series of lies that threaten to derail the author’s life—exploring the line between truth and deception, fact and fiction, and reality and conspiracy. Sarah’s story begins as she’s researching what she believes will be a book about her high school philosophy teacher, a charismatic instructor who taught her and her classmates to question everything—in the end, even the reality of historical atrocities. As she digs into the effects of his teachings, her life takes a turn into the fantastical when her wife, Marta, is notified that she’s bee...

Beyond Identities: Human Becomings in Weirding Worlds
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 201

Beyond Identities: Human Becomings in Weirding Worlds

This book is an argument for moving beyond culturally/historically/ethnically/biologically-grounded identity as the necessary foundation of an authentic self. It highlights examples of people who are attempting to inhabit identities they feel are more appropriate to themselves, by deploring the damage done via claims about authentic identity. The sole theme of this book is “becoming beyond identity”. We are not fixed human beings but rather perpetually-dynamic human becomings. As intelligence is enabled or recognized beyond the merely human, we should welcome our continuing evolution from homosapiens, sapiens, into many varieties of intelligences on Earth and the cosmos. This book builds...

Emotions and Virtues in Feature Writing
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 270

Emotions and Virtues in Feature Writing

This book provides an important and original way of understanding how journalists use emotion to communicate to readers, posing the deceptively simple question, ‘how do journalists make us feel something when we read their work?’. Martin uses case-studies of award-winning magazine-style features to illuminate how some of the best writers of literary journalism give readers the gift of experiencing a range of perspectives and emotions in the telling of a single story. Part One of this book discusses the origins and development of narrative journalism and introduces a new theoretical framework, the Virtue Paradigm, and a new textual analysis tool, the Virtue Map. Part Two includes three case-studies of prize-winning journalism, demonstrating how the Virtue Paradigm and the Virtue Map provide fresh insight into narrative journalism and the ongoing conversation of what it means to live well together in community.

Aligning the Glacier's Ghost
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 160

Aligning the Glacier's Ghost

Rooted in Western Montana, the essays of Aligning the Glacier's Ghost navigate how sense of place intertwines with sense of self, filling geographical and personal in-betweens of identity and illness, memory and story, and intimacy and solitude. This stunning and evocative debut gives shape to those distances, naming them as grief, narrative, and belonging. Capdeville begins the collection with one of many fissures of health, setting the stage for a lush braiding of metaphor, the body, and the natural world. In spanning the space between loss and being lost, Aligning the Glacier's Ghost outlines absence, the evolution of self, and Capdeville's foundation of place in trail work, travel, and early adulthood. Readers will find themselves enmeshed in Capdeville's reflections on how the seen and unseen interconnect to shape an inner world.

The Gay Girl in Damascus Hoax
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 174

The Gay Girl in Damascus Hoax

The Gay Girl in Damascus Hoax explores the vulnerability of educated and politically engaged Westerners to Progressive Orientalism, a form of Orientalism embedded within otherwise egalitarian and anti-imperialist Western thought. Early in the Arab Spring, the Gay Girl in Damascus blog appeared. Its author claimed to be Amina Arraf, a Syrian American lesbian Muslim woman living in Damascus. After the blog’s went viral in April 2011, Western journalists electronically interviewed Amina, magnifying the blog’s claim that the Syrian uprising was an ethnically and religiously pluralist movement anchored in an expansive sense of social solidarity. However, after a post announced that the secret...

Masculinities and Literary Studies
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 225

Masculinities and Literary Studies

Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part I Rethinking Ethnic Masculinities -- 1 The Negro Goes to War -- 2 Revisiting Masculinities from Whiteness Studies: Herman Melville's "Benito Cereno"--3 Staging Intersectionality: Beyond Gender and Race in the American Theater -- Part II Transnational Masculinities -- 4 Men Around the World: Global and Transnational Masculinities -- 5 Transnational Legacies and Masculinity Politics in The Brief Wondrous Life Of Oscar Wao -- 6 New Arab Masculinities: A Feminist Approach to Arab American Men in Post-9/11 Literature Written by Women -- Part III The Ages of Men -- 7 "Men Who Cry in Their Sleep": Aging Male Hysteria...

Loose of Earth
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 241

Loose of Earth

"Thirty-eight years old, fit and handsome, John Blackburn was a former Air Force pilot and evangelical Christian. His wife, a veterinarian, healed animals and homeschooled their five children with the Bible as their textbook. The coming end of days was certainty, not poetry, and for John, the end did arrive--cancer. The healing hands of his community hovered over growing tumors in his torso, but his disease continued to progress. At the time, no one knew that the Ogallala Aquifer, the giant underground sponge of wet rock that irrigates the High Plains, was awash in PFAs--carcinogenic residuals of firefighting foams. The deadly chemicals seeped into the wells of Lubbock and the water of Reese...