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RMST 202 Literatures and Cultures of the Romance World II: Modern to Post-Modern
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perspective

Luiselli – So It’s a Story, Not Reality?

To start, this is definitely one of the novels that I struggled with the most this term. It had a completely different and unique take on literature. Normally, I like to write my blog post before I watch the lecture or conversation video, as a way to showcase my own perspectives when it is still […]

Posted in Blogs, Luiselli | Tagged with family, memory, perspective, writing

Why be a fly on the wall when you can be an osga (Eulálio eu te amo

Oi blog!! Hope this past week was good :)) This week, I had the pleasure of reading The Book of Chameleons. When I first picked this book from the syllabus, a small part of my mind started the debate of “should I read this book in English or in Portuguese??” While you may think my answer […]

Posted in Blogs | Tagged with Dreams, geckos, identity, memories, perspective, reality, relationships, The Book of Chameleons

You were right Jon, I’ve never read a book like this – If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller

I’ve never felt so acknowledged by an author, because we (a reader)are not meant to contribute to the story, because the story’s already been told. There’s not much we can do except observe, and hope the ending is favourable. I guess that’s still the same even with this book. No matter how involved the readers […]

Posted in Blogs | Tagged with literature, narration, perspective

Book 3: “A Shrouded Woman” Narrates from Her Body

My first impression of “A Shrouded Woman” was that the many perspectives were really cool: shifting from her POV to the other funeralgoers and even times when it was like she “talked” to others’ narration, like the Father. But the weirdest one is still her own. From what I’ve read, most forms of the post-death […]

Posted in Blogs, Bombal | Tagged with beauty, mortality, perspective, women

Modernist Visual Culture

Modernist Visual Culture

Modernist and Avant-Garde images

Posted in Aragon resources, Proust resources | Tagged with Art, avant-garde, modernism, painting, perspective, sculpture, Surrealism

Proust and the Modernist Novel

Proust and the Modernist Novel

Marcel Proust, “Combray”

Posted in Lecture Videos, Proust lecture | Tagged with C20th, childhood, difficulty, framing, France, modernism, perspective, representation, temporality, time

Week 12- Faces in the Crowd

Hello everyone! As we are soon approaching the end of the semester it is truly crazy to see how fast it has all gone. This course taught me so much about myself as a reader and pushed me to move past my comfort zone with reading to experience texts that I would have maybe never picked for myself. As we move to our last book I can say I did not enjoy reading but I am starting to open up to it. This week’s book “Faces in the Crowd” by…read more

Posted in Blogs | Tagged with memory, perspective

Faces in the Crowd: This Was the Hardest Book I’ve Read So Far but at Least I’ve Got an A+ (Mar 30)

I am happy to say that I have read all the 11 books for this course. But the bad news is that after reading this week’s book, I AM SO CONFUSED.  I’ve managed to get through 100 pages of the novel over the course of 3 hours. Now, I’m starting a blog to delve into … Continue reading Faces in the Crowd: This Was the Hardest Book I’ve Read So Far but at Least I’ve Got an A+ (Mar 30)

Posted in Blogs, Luiselli | Tagged with 1 Star, perspective, Surreal

Week 9- The Lover

“The Lover” by Marguerite Duras was a book I actually really liked. Although I had anticipated to hate this book just from the context given in class it really caught me by surprise. The narrator’s perspective of the story is what caught my attention. In today’s world if a story is written about an underage relationship we automatically feel it is exploitive, abusive, and naive but this book took a very different view. The narrator takes back control and tells us the story in a way that suggests she knows…read more

Posted in Blogs | Tagged with control, perspective

A written representation of writers block

I felt that this novel perfectly encapsulated what it is like to write an essay. Even while writing this blogpost I am struggling to pinpoint exactly what I want to say and how I want to say it. I find myself wanting to plan it out from beginning to end, with an intro, middle, and […]

Posted in Blogs, Lispector | Tagged with childhood, class, Empathy, gender, identity, isolation, narrative, perspective, poverty

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