6,400 research outputs found

    Maggie Nelson: Argonautit

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    Kirja-arvostelu teoksesta Maggie Nelson, Argonautit, suom. Kaijamari Sivill, S&S 2018.nonPeerReviewe

    Maggie Nelson: Sinelmiä

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    Kirja-arvostelu teoksesta Maggie Nelson: Sinelmiä, suom. Kaijamari Sivill, S&S 2019nonPeerReviewe

    Maggie Nelson: Vapaudesta

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    Arvio teoksesta Maggie Nelson: Vapaudesta, neljä laulua rakkaudesta ja rajoista, suom Kaijamari Sivill, S&S, 2022nonPeerReviewe

    The Forms Things Want to Come As

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    Rather than take up the literary world’s on and off obsession with classifications and genre demarcations, this talk will center on the relationship between ideas, things, forms, and shapes — how writing can be a practice of, as poet A. R. Ammons once put it, looking for ‘the forms|things want to come as’. What does it mean for a thing to want to come as a form? What is the relationship between the content of an idea and its shape on the page? To examine such questions, Nelson will read from a variety of her works and think about how they relate (or don’t) to poet Robert Creeley’s famous contention, ‘form is never more than an extension of content’. Possible tributary lines of thought include: the literary nature of (some) philosophy; the question of ‘vernacular scholarship’ (a term coined by Eileen Myles), various strategies of performing the self in writing; and the value of never settling, of staying on the move. Maggie Nelson is the author of several acclaimed books of poetry and prose, including the forthcoming collection Like Love: Essays and Conversations (2024), the national bestseller On Freedom: Four Songs of Care and Constraint (2021), the National Book Critics Circle Award winner The Argonauts (2015), The Art of Cruelty: A Reckoning (2011), Bluets (2009; named by Bookforum as one of the top 10 best books of the past 20 years), The Red Parts (2007), Women, the New York School, and Other True Abstractions (2007), and Jane: A Murder (2005). In 2016 she received a MacArthur ‘genius’ Fellowship. She currently teaches at the University of Southern California and lives in Los Angeles, CA. Book review at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, February 2025: https://blogs.hu-berlin.de/todo/notes-on-autotheory-thoughts-from-our-colloquium-discussions-february-2025

    Marriage record of Nelson, Peter and Williams, Maggie

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    Marriage license for Peter Nelson and Maggie Williams. N.W. King was the officiant

    Maggie Nelson: Jane / Punaiset osat

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    nonPeerReviewe

    Self Study

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    David Kishik’s Self Study (ICI Berlin Press, 2023) is a genre-bending work of autophilosophy. It opens a rare, rear window into the schizoid position of self-sufficient withdrawal and impassive indifference. This inability to be enriched by outer experiences feeds the relentless suspicion that hell is other people. Laying bare his life and work, Kishik engages with psychoanalysis, philosophy, and cultural inquiry to trace loneliness across the history of thought, leading to today’s shut-in society and the autonomous subject of liberal capitalism. David Kishik will read from his book, followed by a conversation with Maggie Nelson and a Q&A with the audience. David Kishik lives in New York and teaches at Emerson College. Self Study is the fifth and final volume in his series of books, To Imagine a Form of Life. Previous titles include The Book of Shem and The Manhattan Project, both published by Stanford University Press. Some shorter texts appeared in the New York Times, Los Angeles Review of Books, and Lapham’s Quarterly. Maggie Nelson is the author of several acclaimed books of poetry and prose, including the forthcoming collection Like Love: Essays and Conversations (2024), the national bestseller On Freedom: Four Songs of Care and Constraint (2021), the National Book Critics Circle Award winner The Argonauts (2015), The Art of Cruelty: A Reckoning (2011), Bluets (2009; named by Bookforum as one of the top 10 best books of the past 20 years), The Red Parts (2007), Women, the New York School, and Other True Abstractions (2007), and Jane: A Murder (2005). In 2016 she received a MacArthur ‘genius’ Fellowship. She currently teaches at the University of Southern California and lives in Los Angeles. Self Study: Notes on the Schizoid Condition (Berlin: ICI Berlin Press, 2023) Paperback | 12 EUR | v, 174 pp. | 17.8 cm x 12.7 cm | ISBN 978-3-96558-045-

    The Embodiment of Theory in Maggie Nelson\u27s The Argonauts

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    The purpose of this research is to explore how Maggie Nelson, in her groundbreaking memoir The Argonauts (2015), works to bring critical theory (primarily queer and feminist theory) out of the academy and into the realm of the personal, rendering theory as tangible and embodied in a real-world setting. Through this unique exchange, Nelson radically reinstates norms relating to gender, sexuality, motherhood and relationships

    Maggie NELSON, "El arte de la crueldad", Madrid, Editorial Tres Puntos, 2020, 305 pp.

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    Maggie NELSON, El arte de la crueldad, Madrid, Editorial Tres Puntos, 2020, 305 pp.Maggie NELSON, El arte de la crueldad, Madrid, Editorial Tres Puntos, 2020, 305 pp

    Nelson-Gon/pycite: pycite version 0.1.1 release notes

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    pycite's changelog pycite 0.1.1 Fixed issues with inconsistent tuple lengths in Pubmed citations https://github.com/Nelson-Gon/pycite/issues/2 PyCite now takes an input_file and output_file as arguments. Fixed issues with incorrect author formatting for NCBI and Pubmed articles Initial support for Pubmed citations i.e. links in the form https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ Explicitly set an HTML parser Initial tests Volumes no longer have the leading "v" attached. Added split_authors a simple method to clean and abbreviate author names. Fixed issues with actions not running on GitHub. Updated documentation pycite 0.1.0 Initial releas
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