Search Results Heading

MBRLSearchResults

mbrl.module.common.modules.added.book.to.shelf
Title added to your shelf!
View what I already have on My Shelf.
Oops! Something went wrong.
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to add the title to your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Are you sure you want to remove the book from the shelf?
Oops! Something went wrong.
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
    Done
    Filters
    Reset
  • Discipline
      Discipline
      Clear All
      Discipline
  • Is Peer Reviewed
      Is Peer Reviewed
      Clear All
      Is Peer Reviewed
  • Reading Level
      Reading Level
      Clear All
      Reading Level
  • Content Type
      Content Type
      Clear All
      Content Type
  • Year
      Year
      Clear All
      From:
      -
      To:
  • More Filters
      More Filters
      Clear All
      More Filters
      Item Type
    • Is Full-Text Available
    • Subject
    • Publisher
    • Source
    • Donor
    • Language
    • Place of Publication
    • Contributors
    • Location
4 result(s) for "Spunt, Nicola"
Sort by:
Rise and sprawl : the condominiumization of Toronto
\"This is the story of the rise and sprawl of the condo tower in Toronto. The sheer number of new towers, their size, mass, volume, and height, let alone the speed by which they are being built, is remarkable. The only thing that isn't remarkable about Toronto's condominiums is their architecture\"--Page [4] of cover.
Pathological Commodification, Contagious Impressions, and Dead Metaphors: Undiagnosing Consumption in The Wings of the Dove
Wings insists on representing Milly Theale's condition as a matter of cognitive reticence, yet refracts it through a twinned rhetoric of disease and economics, illuminating a coextensivity between pathology and commodification. Effectively, Kate Croy's undiagnosis of the consumptive verdict invites a broader consideration of consumption's mutating tropes, which figure appetitive relations as well as the assimilation of contagious impressions. If Milly does not definitively have consumption, she is nevertheless subjected to it. Her pecuniary ontology predisposes her to being used (up); however, as a figure for dead metaphor, she also exceeds death, and moreover, allegorizes the death of the overdetermined consumptive heroine.
Ontotropology: disfiguration and unreadability in James Joyce's Ulysses
Discusses how temporality, disfiguration and orgasm in the \"Nausicaa\" episode of James Joyce's \"Ulysses\" together become an allegory of unreadability. The focus is on the episode's female protagonist, Gerty McDowell, and \"Nausicaa\" stages a tension between the ideality and transparency usually associated with the sentimental genre and its transgressive shocks: a public display of onanistic activity and the revelation of Gerty's \"lame leg\". The text invokes a \"contretemps\" to figure a scene of indigestion, and this produces a counternarrative which thwarts the ostensible readability which it purports. The discussion includes a co-articulation of ontology and tropology based on the word of Jacques Derrida and Jean-Luc Nancy, to form a theory of \"ontotropology\": the figuration of ontology as a condition of tropological surfeit born of temporal disjunction.
Ontotropology: Disfiguration and Unreadability in James Joyce's Ulysses
This paper explores how figures of temporality, disfiguration and orgasm in the 'Nausicaa' episode of Joyce's Ulysses come together to allegorise unreadability. I argue that the text's invocation of a ' contretemps ' to figure a scene of indigestion elicits a temporality of shock, producing a counternarrative that thwarts (vomits up) the ostensible readability it purports. Moreover, the principles of ideality and transparency commonly associated with the sentimental mode are countervailed by the episode's transgressive rhetorical shocks: a public display of onanistic activity and the revelation of Gerty's 'lame leg'. The text's renderings of Gerty's disfiguration as well as the orgasmic both work to allegorise unreadability; I also suggest that they ramify ontologically. Drawing on Jacques Derrida and Jean-Luc Nancy, I investigate the co-articulation of ontology and tropology in 'Nausicaa' to adumbrate a theory of 'ontotropology' - the figuration of ontology as an undecidable condition of tropological surfeit born out of temporal disjunction.