| Volume
42, Number 1
Spring 2008
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| John V. Knapp
Teaching Literature and Writing: An Interview with Gerald Graff, MLA President 2008 Cathy Birkenstein and Gerald Graff
J. Paul Hurh
Geordie Hamilton
Katy Wright
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| J. Paul Hurh, “Dirimens Copulatio
and Metalinguistic Negation in Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom!”
Although many critics have noticed the prevalence of negation in Faulkner’s prose, not enough attention has been paid to the unique function and logic of pairing negated statements with positive ones. This essay posits that the rhetorical figure of dirimens copulatio (“not x, but y”) is raised to the organizing principle of Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom! This strategy of negating a prior statement to shape and clarify a positive one is not only locally employed at crucial moments in the novel, but it also characterizes the novel’s wider structure of presenting a sequence of competing and exclusive claims. This essay considers the logic and poetics of dirimens copulatio and discovers that it, in Faulkner’s use, employs metalinguistic negation (negating on the basis of assertibility, not descriptive truth). Tropological consideration of dirimens copulatio also reveals it as illustrative of the asymmetrical dynamism underlying interrelations among the novel’s central tropaic registers. By applying the conclusions about the metalinguistic logic and tropaic function of dirimens copulatio to the wider narrative’s narratological, political and authorial stakes, I show how dirimens copulatio enables an imbalanced fusion of the novel’s racial, legal, sexual, and political ontologies. back to top Geordie Hamilton. “Focalization as Education:
The Race Relation Optimism of the Narrator of Charles Chesnutt’s The
Marrow of Tradition (1901)”
In contrast with previous scholarship, this paper concentrates on the
study of Tradition’s narration, using concepts from narrative theory to
argue that the text’s audience is constructed or educated into specific
ways of thinking by the novel’s reliable narrator—ways of thinking that
necessitate a re-assessment of the prior interpretations just mentioned.
Drawing particularly on theories of narrative perspective or “focalization,”
and synthesizing this work with recent developments in rhetorical approaches
to narrative study, I argue that Tradition’s narrator identifies William
as the hero and moral center of the novel, and directs readers to entertain
mixed feelings for the Carterets, the family of white supremacists who
act as antagonists to the protagonist Millers. At the same time, however,
my analysis aims to complement rather than oppose the prior readings, seeking
to clarify rather than close scholarly discussion of Chesnutt’s novel.
Katy Wright. “The Role of Dialect Representation
in Speaking from the Margins: “The Lesson” of Toni Cade Bambara”
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