In this episode, Rebecca Warshofsky—a third-year PhD student in the Comparative Literature Department at Binghamton—discusses how the lines that divide philosophy and literature are more fluid than we think; both give us tools to look for truth by allowing us to reflect on experience in different ways. She reads excerpts from Chuck Palahniuk\u27s Rant to give an example of how taboo subjects can be used in fiction in order to break down the normal lines of meaning and reality
In Episode Two of Novel Dialogue, critic and scholar Bruce Robbins sits down with Nobel Laureate Orh...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...
Angie Carter is a writer, organizer, and sociologist whose work focuses on rural communities, agricu...
Episode 7 Guests: Dr. Ana Schnellmann and Dr. Kathi Vosevich discuss the value of understanding Shak...
Philosophy tries to discover Truth, but more often than not it tells stories, relying on allegories,...
2500 years ago, Plato wrote the central texts of the discipline we call philosophy. He asked the que...
In this episode, we chat with Rebecca Forney, a PhD candidate in Comparative Literature, about what ...
Discussing sex can be quite difficult, even embarrassing, but philosophers have been doing it for th...
In this episode, we chat with Andrew Nelson, a first year PhD student in Comparative Literature, abo...
Discussing sex can be quite difficult, even embarrassing, but philosophers have been doing it for th...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
David Koepsell earned his PhD in philosophy as well as his law degree from the University at Buffalo...
IN THE past three years the teaching of literature in America intensified the emphasis of recent dec...
The love story is an integral part of many novels. What is its narrative status? How does it functio...
grantor: University of TorontoWriting Fiction as a Form of Inquiry: A Defense and Explora...
In Episode Two of Novel Dialogue, critic and scholar Bruce Robbins sits down with Nobel Laureate Orh...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...
Angie Carter is a writer, organizer, and sociologist whose work focuses on rural communities, agricu...
Episode 7 Guests: Dr. Ana Schnellmann and Dr. Kathi Vosevich discuss the value of understanding Shak...
Philosophy tries to discover Truth, but more often than not it tells stories, relying on allegories,...
2500 years ago, Plato wrote the central texts of the discipline we call philosophy. He asked the que...
In this episode, we chat with Rebecca Forney, a PhD candidate in Comparative Literature, about what ...
Discussing sex can be quite difficult, even embarrassing, but philosophers have been doing it for th...
In this episode, we chat with Andrew Nelson, a first year PhD student in Comparative Literature, abo...
Discussing sex can be quite difficult, even embarrassing, but philosophers have been doing it for th...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
David Koepsell earned his PhD in philosophy as well as his law degree from the University at Buffalo...
IN THE past three years the teaching of literature in America intensified the emphasis of recent dec...
The love story is an integral part of many novels. What is its narrative status? How does it functio...
grantor: University of TorontoWriting Fiction as a Form of Inquiry: A Defense and Explora...
In Episode Two of Novel Dialogue, critic and scholar Bruce Robbins sits down with Nobel Laureate Orh...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...
Angie Carter is a writer, organizer, and sociologist whose work focuses on rural communities, agricu...