-
SIGN IN BELOW
Group Blogs
-
Tag Cloud
- "Tool Kit"
- 20% project
- Alison Bechdel
- Anne Bradstreet
- audience
- authenticity
- Autobiographical Truth
- Autobiography
- Benjamin Franklin
- Cabeza de Vaca
- character sketch
- Claudia Rankine
- coaxers
- coercers
- Comic
- Confession
- Don't Let Me Be Lonely
- Embodiment
- ethics
- Experience
- Fun Home
- Giralamo Cardano
- Gurdwara
- identity
- Ideological I
- Knowledge
- Memory
- Naming
- Narrative
- parental influences
- Puritan
- puritanism
- Puritans
- Reading Autobiography
- relationality
- religion
- Religious Ideologies & Disasters
- Self
- Sherman Alexie
- Sikh
- Smith and Watson
- Spiritual Autobiography
- storytelling
- The Unauthorized Autobiography of Me
- Voice
-
Recent Posts
Tag Archives: Don’t Let Me Be Lonely
Claudia Rankine and Space in Don’t Let Me Be Lonely: An American Liver
Reading Rankine’s unique work, I was struck by her frequent references to different prescription drugs, the television and the liver. As I read on, I felt that this was more of an Autobiography of America from a certain perspective in … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged America, Claudia Rankine, collective identity, death, Don't Let Me Be Lonely, fear, liver, over-medicated, race, sadness, space, time
Comments Off on Claudia Rankine and Space in Don’t Let Me Be Lonely: An American Liver
Rankine’s Lyric Voice and Form
Considering Rankine’s obsession over understanding loss and ultimately death, I feel that the lyric is the perfect approach to trying to reify those abstract and complex ideas. Her background as a poet allows her this liminal space between narrative and … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Claudia Rankine, Don't Let Me Be Lonely, Voice
Comments Off on Rankine’s Lyric Voice and Form
The Importance of Paratextual Information in Claudia Rankine’s Don’t Let Me Be Lonely
Smith and Watson, the co-writers of the riveting text Reading Autobiography, define paratext as “the framing produced by their (a books) publication, reception, and circulation” (99). “Cover designs, the author’s name, the dedication, titles, prefaces, introductions, chapter breaks, and endnotes” … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Claudia Rankine, Don't Let Me Be Lonely, paratext
Comments Off on The Importance of Paratextual Information in Claudia Rankine’s Don’t Let Me Be Lonely
Let There Be Peace on Earth and Let It Begin With Us
In Reading Autobiography, the section on embodiment includes a description of a sociopolitical body. Smith and Watson define this sociopolitical body as “a set of cultural attitudes and discourses encoding the public meanings of bodies that have for centuries underwritten … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Claudia Rankine, Don't Let Me Be Lonely, Embodiment, Sociopolitical Body
Comments Off on Let There Be Peace on Earth and Let It Begin With Us