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1

Bianchi, Bernardo, Emilie Filion-Donato, Marlon Miguel, and Ayşe Yuva, eds. Materialism and Politics. ICI Berlin Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.37050/ci-20.

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Is materialism still relevant to critically think politics? Throughout modernity, the concept of materialism was associated with fatalism and naturalism, when it was not simply dismissed as heresy and atheism. In the nineteenth century, materialism evolved into a central concept of progressive politics, reappearing again in the past decades through renewed Marxist and Spinoza-based approaches, New Materialism, and feminist discourses. This volume inquires these contrasting uses from theoretical and historical perspectives.
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Thorpe, Holly, Julie Brice, and Marianne Clark. Feminist New Materialisms, Sport and Fitness. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-56581-7.

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3

Ringrose, Jessica, Katie Warfield, and Shiva Zarabadi. Feminist Posthumanisms, New Materialisms and Education. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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4

Ringrose, Jessica, Katie Warfield, and Shiva Zarabadi. Feminist Posthumanisms, New Materialisms and Education. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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5

Ringrose, Jessica, Katie Warfield, and Shiva Zarabadi. Feminist Posthumanisms, New Materialisms and Education. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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6

Ringrose, Jessica, Katie Warfield, and Shiva Zarabadi. Feminist Posthumanisms, New Materialisms and Education. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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7

Ringrose, Jessica, Katie Warfield, and Shiva Zarabadi. Feminist Posthumanisms, New Materialisms and Education. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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8

Osgood, Jayne, Veronica Pacini-Ketchabaw, and Toni Ingram. Feminist New Materialism, Girlhood, and the School Ball. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2022.

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9

Allen, Louisa. Sexuality Education and New Materialism: Queer Things. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018.

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10

Sexuality Education and New Materialism: Queer Things. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018.

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11

Allen, Louisa. Sexuality Education and New Materialism: Queer Things. Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.

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12

Guðmundsdóttir, Arnfríður, Anne Elvey, and Hilda P. Koster. Reading with Earth: Contributions of the New Materialism to an Ecological Feminist Hermeneutics. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2022.

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13

Wingrove, Elizabeth. Materialisms. Edited by Lisa Disch and Mary Hawkesworth. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199328581.013.23.

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This chapter explores the diverse, sometimes discordant ways in which commitments to materialism have shaped feminist theoretical inquiry. Focusing on two alternative interpretive frameworks—historical materialist feminisms (HMF) and feminist new materialisms (FNM)—the chapter considers how distinct understandings of “materiality” sustain alternative accounts of agency, power, and difference. The chapter aims to highlight how these appeals to markedly different notions of a material “real” lead to markedly different interpretive grammars: one (HMF) emphasizing systematicity and the durability
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14

Leeuwen, Anne van. We Have Always Been Materialists. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190275594.003.0005.

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This essay revolves around a basic question: What is the relationship between twentieth- century French feminism and materialist politics? More precisely, what is the place of materialism in the works of Simone de Beauvoir and Luce Irigaray, or in what sense are the philosophies of Beauvoir and Irigaray “materialist” ones? I take up this set of questions vis-à-vis the “new” materialism of Marx—a materialism that destroys the classical philosophical opposition of idealism and materialism in order to think the subject of politics. I seek to show that it is precisely this subject that we find in
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15

Feminist new materialisms. MDPI, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/books978-3-03921-809-7.

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16

Tuin, Iris van der. Generational Feminism: New Materialist Introduction to a Generative Approach. Lexington Books/Fortress Academic, 2016.

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17

Tuin, Iris van der. Generational Feminism: New Materialist Introduction to a Generative Approach. Lexington Books/Fortress Academic, 2014.

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18

Generational Feminism: New Materialist Introduction to a Generative Approach. Lexington Books/Fortress Academic, 2014.

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19

Ringrose, Jessica, Katie Warfield, and Shiva Zarabadi, eds. Feminist Posthumanisms, New Materialisms and Education. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351186674.

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20

Mondloch, Kate. Capsule Aesthetic: Feminist Materialisms in New Media Art. University of Minnesota Press, 2018.

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21

Capsule Aesthetic: Feminist Materialisms in New Media Art. University of Minnesota Press, 2018.

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22

Brice, Julie, Marianne Clark, and Holly Thorpe. Feminist New Materialisms, Sport and Fitness: A Lively Entanglement. Springer International Publishing AG, 2022.

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23

Brice, Julie, Marianne Clark, and Holly Thorpe. Feminist New Materialisms, Sport and Fitness: A Lively Entanglement. Springer International Publishing AG, 2020.

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24

Deutscher, Penelope. Dead Camp. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190275594.003.0003.

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This chapter asks how Simone de Beauvoir’s work is now read from the perspective of feminist theory that postdated her. It focuses on readings of Beauvoir introduced by Judith Butler, Wendy Brown, and Elizabeth Wilson. It considers Beauvoir’s work from the perspective of innovations such as the sex–gender distinction and its subsequent critique, the Nietzschean critique of resentment, feminism of embodiment, and new materialist feminisms. Since a new series of questions has emerged with which to approach the status of biology in Beauvoir’s work, I argue for a productive reading of Beauvoir, gi
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25

Smircich, Linda, and Marta B. Calás. Research Agenda for Organization Studies, Feminisms and New Materialisms. Elgar Publishing Limited, Edward, 2023.

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26

Fazel, Valerie M., and Louise Geddes, eds. Variable Objects. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474481397.001.0001.

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Drawing on new materialism and object-oriented ontology, this book proposes that Shakespeare is a vibrant object replete with a variable energy that accounts or its infinite meaning-making capacity. Using critical race theory, object-oriented feminism, performance studies, Global Shakespeares, media students and game theory, the collection’s essays explore the dialogical relations between the Shakespeare object and its appropriation. Instead of moving away from the source of appropriations, an object-oriented approach centralises Shakespeare without the constraints of outdate notions of fideli
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27

Roy, Deboleena. Science Studies. Edited by Lisa Disch and Mary Hawkesworth. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199328581.013.41.

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This chapter provides an overview of the emergence and development of feminist science studies and traces its engagement with key concepts in feminist theory. First, it considers the operationalization of liberal/equal rights feminist frameworks within science and the efforts to create scientific knowledge through sex/gender analyses. Next, it examines the new materialist conversations that have changed feminist theory’s relation to matter and binaries such as sex/gender, contrasting feminist poststructuralist and feminist science studies approaches to the “material turn” in feminist theory. F
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28

Sherwood, Yvonne, ed. The Bible and Feminism. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198722618.001.0001.

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This groundbreaking book breaks with established canons and resists some of the stereotypes of feminist biblical studies. A wide range of contributors—from the Netherlands, Germany, Norway, East Africa, South Africa, Argentina, Israel, Hong Kong, the US, the UK, and Iran—showcase new methodological and theoretical movements such as feminist materialisms; intersectionality; postidentitarian ?nomadic? politics; gender archaeology; lived religion; and theories of the human and the posthuman. They engage a range of social and political issues, including migration and xenophobia; divorce and family
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29

Bray, Karen, and Stephen D. Moore, eds. Religion, Emotion, Sensation. Fordham University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823285679.001.0001.

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Religion, Emotion, Sensation asks what the blooming field of critical inquiry known as affect theory has to say about God or gods, religion or religions, scriptures, theologies, or liturgies. Contributors explore the crossings and crisscrossings between affect theory and theology and the study of religion more broadly. At once transpersonal and prepersonal, affect transcends and subtends the human. As such, it has affinity with divinity, but a divinity that is indissociable from materiality. Bringing together affect theorists, theologians, biblical scholars, and scholars of religion, this volu
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30

Moslund, Sten Pultz, Marlene Karlsson Marcussen, and Martin Karlsson Pedersen, eds. How Literature Comes to Matter. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474461313.001.0001.

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How Literature Comes to Matter revolves around the central question of how “matter comes to matter” (Barad) in literature. The book offers an interdisciplinary encounter between literary criticism and post-anthropocentric theory such as new materialist and object-oriented studies. Through a rethinking of the relationship between the subject and object, the human and the nonhuman, the book shows how literature and post-anthropocentric theory can illuminate each other in mutually productive ways. Focusing on how the study of literature is an underdeveloped field within ‘the material turn’, the i
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31

Wróbel-Best, Jolanta, ed. Wheels of Change: Feminist Transgressions in Polish Culture and Society. University of Warsaw Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/uw.9788323549482.

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Using rich and varied narrative images and resources, literary artworks, excerpts from philosophical and sociological writings, musicological theories and film studies, historical documents, and other materials, this collection of essays strongly sides with the feminist theory. All chapters tirelessly construct feminist discourse by depicting a new reality, language, and values to assess as well as understand the life, goals, and social achievements of women over a span of centuries in Polish culture and society. Feminist transgression is envisioned as a thematic category bridging diverse, see
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32

Bianchi, Emanuela, Sara Brill, and Brooke Holmes, eds. Antiquities Beyond Humanism. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198805670.001.0001.

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Countering an unflagging modernist infatuation with the new, Antiquities beyond Humanism maps out the ground for a richer and more sustained encounter with Greco-Roman antiquity, excavating an ante-humanism that nonetheless does not seek any kind of return to a pre-humanist arcadia. The volume arises from a commitment to actively engage the ancient philosophical tradition as a powerful field through which to tackle some of the most urgent questions addressed by the new materialisms and forms of post- and non-humanism. The papers gathered here take up ancient Greek philosophical and literary te
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33

Baxter, Judith, and Kate Chopin. The Awakening and other stories. Text mit Materialien. Klett, 1998.

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34

Nyong'o, Tavia. Afro-Fabulations. NYU Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479856275.001.0001.

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In Afro-Fabulations: The Queer Drama of Black Life, the cultural critic and historian Tavia Nyong’o surveys the conditions of contemporary black artistic production in the wake of post-blackness. Moving fluidly between the insurgent art of the 1960s and the intersectional activism of the present day, Afro-Fabulations challenges genealogies of blackness that ignore its creative capacity to exceed conditions of traumatic loss, social death, and archival erasure. Tracking how the bodies that were speculated in as commodities became speculative bodies, he develops an account of black fabulation th
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35

Rapoport-Albert, Ada, and Moshe Rosman. Hasidic Studies: Essays in History and Gender. Liverpool University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781906764821.001.0001.

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This volume shows the erudition of the author's contribution to rewriting the master-narrative of hasidic history. We now know that eighteenth-century Hasidism evolved in a context of intense spirituality. It developed through a process of differentiation from traditional ascetic-mystical hasidism. Its elite leaders only became conscious of a distinctive group identity after the Ba'al Shem Tov's death, and they subsequently spent the period from the late-eighteenth to the early-nineteenth century experimenting with various forms of doctrine, literature, organization, leadership, and transfer o
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36

Hall, Dewey W., and Jillmarie Murphy, eds. Gendered Ecologies. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781949979046.001.0001.

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Gendered Ecologies: New Materialist Interpretations of Women Writers in the Long Nineteenth Century is comprised of a diverse collection of essays featuring analyses of literary women writers, ecofeminism, feminist ecocriticism, and the value of the interrelationships that exist among human, nonhuman, and nonliving entities as part of the environs. The book presents a case for the often-disregarded literary women writers of the long nineteenth century, who were active contributors to the discourse of natural history—the diachronic study of participants as part of a vibrant community interconne
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37

Harris, Kate Lockwood. Beyond the Rapist. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190876920.001.0001.

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In the United States, approximately one in five women experiences rape during college, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) students experience sexual violence at higher rates than their peers. Given this context, many colleges are working to better prevent and address these assaults. This book takes up this social problem—how organizations talk about and respond to sexual violence—and considers it in proximity to a persistent theoretical dilemma in the academic field of organizational communication: How are organization and violence related, and what does that relationsh
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38

Soreanu, Raluca, Jakob Staberg, and Jenny Wilner. Ferenczi Dialogues. Leuven University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.11116/9789461664860.

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Ferenczi Dialogues presents the contribution of Sándor Ferenczi to a psychoanalytic theory of trauma and discusses the philosophical, political and clinical implications of Ferenczi’s thinking. To a far greater extent than Freud, Sándor Ferenczi centered his psychoanalytic thought around trauma. Ferenczi's work pluralizes the notion of catastrophe, as being both destructive and a turning point. This book addresses Ferenczi’s work in terms of thinking in times of crises, by considering contemporary situations in constellation with various scenes from the past: the outbreak of the First World Wa
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39

Dixon, Martin, Robert McCorquodale, and Sarah Williams. Cases & Materials on International Law. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198727644.001.0001.

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Cases and Materials on International Law, a topical companion for study placing international law directly in the context of contemporary debate, offers broad coverage of international law, and is suitable for use alongside a range of course structures and teaching styles. The book provides readers with a comprehensive selection of case law extracts for their studies. Extracts have been chosen from a wide range of historical and contemporary cases to illustrate the reasoning processes of the courts and to show how legal principles are developed. The book contains the essential cases and materi
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40

Meeker, Natania, and Antónia Szabari. Radical Botany. Fordham University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823286638.001.0001.

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Radical Botany uncovers a long speculative tradition of plant fiction that conjures up new languages to grasp the life of plants—their vegetality—in all its specificity and vigor. The first part of the book reaches back to seventeenth-century materialisms to show how plants, rather than being systematically excluded from human deliberation, have in fact participated in modernity. The French authors with whom the work begins turn to plants to think through the problems and paradoxes that face all forms of life considered first as matter. Within this framework, plants are ascribed an agency and
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41

Juárez-Almendros, Encarnación. Disabled Bodies in Early Modern Spanish Literature. Liverpool University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9781786940780.001.0001.

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The book examines, from the perspective of feminist disability theories, the concepts and role of women in selected Spanish discourses and literary texts from the late fifteenth to seventeenth centuries. It explores a wide range of Spanish medical, regulatory and moral discourses in order to show how these inherit, reproduce and propagate an amalgam of Western traditional concepts of the female embodiment. The book also examines concrete representations of deviant female characters, with a focus in the figure of the syphilitic prostitute and the physically decayed aged women, in a variety of l
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42

Ferrarese, Estelle. The Fragility of Concern for Others. Translated by Steven Corcoran. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474467391.001.0001.

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The book’s underlying project is to renew and sharpen Critical Theory through feminism. It aims to develop our thinking about the social conditions of caring for others, while arguing for an understanding of morality that is materialist and political – always-already political. Offering the first systematic study of the idea of “coldness” in Adorno’s philosophy, Ferrarese’s book is the first to stage a dialogue between Adornian Critical Theory and the ethics of care. It thereby endeavours to think through the mechanisms of the social fragility of caring for others, the moral gesture it enjoins
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43

Belser, Julia Watts. Rabbinic Tales of Destruction. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190600471.001.0001.

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Rabbinic Tales of Destruction examines early Jewish accounts of the Roman conquest of Jerusalem from the perspective of the wounded body and the scarred land. Amidst stories saturated with sexual violence, enslavement, forced prostitution, disability, and bodily risk, the book argues that rabbinic narrative wrestles with the brutal body costs of Roman imperial domination. It brings disability studies, feminist theory, and new materialist ecological thought to accounts of rabbinic catastrophe, revealing how rabbinic discourses of gender, sexuality, and the body are shaped in the shadow of empir
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44

Nasrallah, Laura Salah. Archaeology and the Letters of Paul. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199699674.001.0001.

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Through case studies of archaeological materials from local contexts, Archaeology and the Letters of Paul illuminates the social, political, economic, and religious lives of those whom the apostle Paul addressed. Roman Ephesos, a likely setting for the household of Philemon, provides evidence of the slave trade. An inscription from Galatia seeks to restrain traveling Roman officials, illuminating how the travels of Paul, Cephas, and others may have disrupted communities. At Philippi, a donation list from a Silvanus cult provides evidence of abundant giving amid economic limitations, parallelin
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45

Cavallo, Francesca. Good night stories for rebel girls. 2017.

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46

Cuny, Noëlle, and Xavier Kalck, eds. Modernist Objects. Liverpool University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781949979503.001.0001.

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Modernist Objects is a unique mix of cultural studies, literature, and visual arts applied to the discrete materiality of objects. It places objects, how they emerge or withdraw, how they fashion us, and what status they hold, at the heart of what constitutes modernism. Three processes are consistently to be observed in modernist object experiments: objecting to realism, fashioning the human, and performing the ornamental. The cumbersome bourgeois semiotics of material possessions was itself taken on by writers as diverse as Beckett or Djuna Barnes as a material to be chipped away at, given ne
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