The reception of Joe Brainard’s work, recently canonized in a comprehensive Library of America collected edition, has long been organized around a surprising rubric: the author’s niceness. Although it might seem that sidestepping the hagiographic attention to Brainard as a friend might be necessary to achieve a more accurate sense of his significance as an artist and author, this essay argues on the contrary that Brainard’s friendliness is in fact central to his aesthetics. The problem is not the attention to Brainard’s niceness but rather the assumption that this quality is a feature of his character rather than a particular sort of affective and poetic labor. Brainard’s work thematizes the relationship between generosity and creativity in...
For the past ten months I have explored the life of a deceased artist named Joseph Barley J.B. Chi...
“Very Two, Very One: Reading as Friendship” embarks upon what the American philosopher John Dewey mi...
The figure of Narcissus, literally falling for himself, has profoundly influenced Western philosophy...
The reception of Joe Brainard’s work, recently canonized in a comprehensive Library of America colle...
This essay focuses upon the work of U.S. artist Joe Brainard and his association with the New York S...
A deconstructive approach to the philosophy of friendship that draws on works by Melville, Emerson a...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. I do not propose that my authorship...
In this paper, we examine the rhetoric of friendship and desire in mid-nineteenth-century American w...
Queer and Bookish: Eve Kosofksy Sedgwick as Book Artist represents the first book-length study to ex...
Paul Ricoeur declares that “being-entangled in stories” is an inherent property of the human conditi...
Choosing literature to read and developing a relationship with it is similar to meeting people and c...
In early modem England, friendship was a term both flexible and deeply fraught. It could apply to ...
I examine friendships between major characters in modernist novels written by four American writers:...
Some of America\u27s most respected authors have contributed to a distinctive discursive tradition t...
With relatively few exceptions, and until fairly recently, Frank O\u27Hara, the poet, has been less ...
For the past ten months I have explored the life of a deceased artist named Joseph Barley J.B. Chi...
“Very Two, Very One: Reading as Friendship” embarks upon what the American philosopher John Dewey mi...
The figure of Narcissus, literally falling for himself, has profoundly influenced Western philosophy...
The reception of Joe Brainard’s work, recently canonized in a comprehensive Library of America colle...
This essay focuses upon the work of U.S. artist Joe Brainard and his association with the New York S...
A deconstructive approach to the philosophy of friendship that draws on works by Melville, Emerson a...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. I do not propose that my authorship...
In this paper, we examine the rhetoric of friendship and desire in mid-nineteenth-century American w...
Queer and Bookish: Eve Kosofksy Sedgwick as Book Artist represents the first book-length study to ex...
Paul Ricoeur declares that “being-entangled in stories” is an inherent property of the human conditi...
Choosing literature to read and developing a relationship with it is similar to meeting people and c...
In early modem England, friendship was a term both flexible and deeply fraught. It could apply to ...
I examine friendships between major characters in modernist novels written by four American writers:...
Some of America\u27s most respected authors have contributed to a distinctive discursive tradition t...
With relatively few exceptions, and until fairly recently, Frank O\u27Hara, the poet, has been less ...
For the past ten months I have explored the life of a deceased artist named Joseph Barley J.B. Chi...
“Very Two, Very One: Reading as Friendship” embarks upon what the American philosopher John Dewey mi...
The figure of Narcissus, literally falling for himself, has profoundly influenced Western philosophy...