The Comparatist
Edited by Zahi Zalloua, Whitman College
Frequency: Annually (October)
Latest Issue: Volume 47, October 2023
Size: 6" x 9", approx 175 pages
Bibliographic Information: ISSN: Print 0195-7678; Digital 1559-0887
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Awarded the Phoenix Prize for Significant Editorial Achievement by the Council of Editors of Learned Journals in 1996, The Comparatist is a dynamic, well-established journal of comparative literature that has appeared annually since 1977. Its areas of focus include the comparative study of literature, cultural movements, and the arts; and literary and cultural theory. Members of the Society for Comparative Literature and the Arts receive a subscription to The Comparatist. For more information, visit The Comparatist‘s website.
Zahi Zalloua is associate professor of French in the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature at Whitman College.
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Editor
Zahi Zalloua
Table of Contents
Volume 47 October 2023
Editor’s Column
Editor’s Column: Whose Reason? Whose Authority?
by Zahi Zalloua
Reason
In the Beginning Was the Logos: Reason and Revolution
by Paul Allen Miller
Editor’s Column: Whose Reason? Whose Authority?
Zahi Zalloua
Reason
In the Beginning Was the Logos: Reason and Revolution
Paul Allen Miller
Psychoanalytic Reason and the Non-Governable of Modern Subjectivity
Carin Franzén
Brian O’keeffe
Aphorism, System and Reason: The Case of Theodor Adorno’s Minima Moralia
Caio Lee
The Critique of Dead Reason: Baudrillard on Biopolitics after Capitalism
Jeffrey R. Di Leo
Eric Hayot
Michael Marder
Reason in the Thinking of Mourad Wahba on Ibn Rushd
Robert K. Beshara
The Blackness of Being (A)Part: Reconceptualizing the Study of the Black Mediterranean
Khalil Saucier
Michael Lackey
The Reception of Jack Kerouac in China: A Proxy for Chinese Culture and Politics
Medical Surveillance and Docility in Jerry Pinto’s Em and The Big Hoom
Srijani Nag, Sayan Chattopadhyay
n Contemporary Middle Eastern Literature: The Works of Alexandra Chreiteh and Fadi Zaghmout
Cheryl Toman
Timothy R. Vande Brake
Unwritten Writing: Deconstruction and the Folklore of Dice Games
Andrew Kingston
Narratives Matter: Translating Disability in Émile Zola’s L’assommoir
Magdala Lissa Jeudy
The Latin American Roots of Sontag’s Death Kit: Borges, Machado, Cortázar, and Clarice
Earl E. Fitz
Unhappily Ever After: Hardy, Tess, and the Fairy Tale Manqué
Jessica Campbell
The Quest as a Historical Inquest
Yomna Saber
Jessi Rae Morton
Mojada, a Medea in Los Angeles or the Symbolization of the Liminal Subject’s Experience
MarÃa Andrea DÃaz Miranda
The Grass-roots, Mass Power and Biopolitics: The Politicized Pandemic in Shanghai’s Covid Quarantine
Jiyuan Ren
Jean-Pierre Bekolo
Review essays and Reviews
Rutledge Prize
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