The theme of issue 2 (2012) is “Marginalia/Marginalities” explored across literature, theatre, film, and cultural theory. It opens with a conversation between Dorota Filipczak and film director Krzysz...
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The theme of issue 2 (2012) is “Marginalia/Marginalities” explored across literature, theatre, film, and cultural theory. It opens with a conversation between Dorota Filipczak and film director Krzysztof Zanussi, addressing cultural exchange and the challenges faced by European cinema. The section “Marginal Matters in Theatre and Film” examines how actors and marginalized spaces have been historically portrayed. Its contributors discuss 18th-century biographies that reframe actors as cultural agents, Samuel Beckett’s self-translation of Waiting for Godot, nature as a marginal force in Terrence Malick’s The Thin Red Line, and the rise of The Big Lebowski from cult obscurity to cultural significance. The authors in the “Margins in Fiction, Poetry and Literary Theory” section write about revisiting the Gothic genre, linking marginality to terror and the fantastic in fin de siècle fiction, Bruno Schulz’s ex-libris art, J. H. Prynne’s poetry, Edward Said’s oeuvre, the Polish reception of Thomas Keneally, and the role of false quotations in Jim Crace’s Arcadia. The final section, “Marginalized Identities,” focuses on individuals in conflict with dominant cultural or social norms. Topics include Ira Daniel Aldridge’s biography, gay masculinities in “Brokeback Mountain,” female marginalization in dystopian fiction, and intercultural identity in works by Alice Walker, Louise Erdrich, Daniel Chacon, Michel Tournier, Monica Ali, Jhumpa Lahiri, and Aravind Adiga. The issue concludes with three reviews (of The Making of London: London in Contemporary Literature by Sebastian Groes; Simon Glendinning’s Derrida; and Native Authenticity: Transnational Perspectives on Native American Literary Studies, edited by Deborah L. Madsen), as well as two interviews: between Fadia Faqir and Maria Assif, and Norman Ravvin and Krzysztof Majer.
Muaz Bin
A Storytelling Workbook is a gem for anyone looking to enhance their narrative skills! The exercises are engaging and practical, making it easy to dive into storytelling with confidence. A must-have for aspiring writers!