29 Matching Annotations
  1. Dec 2023
    1. he did not hesitate

      yes he did lol

    2. Meanwhile, Salim’s mother shows no comfort or satisfaction from her outings. This is very clear in her long silences after coming back from her outings.

      I disagree the silence after returning from her visits with Hakim could be a defense to protect her from acknowledging the guilt of enjoyment she has with Hakim

    3. He does not offer any concessions that would contradict his beliefs or values regarding colonialism and imperialism.

      debatable, the impression of england thru gravel heart to bythe sea

  2. Oct 2023
    1. He had two lives: one, open, seen exacdy )ike the livesknow, full of relative truth and or |jfe running its C0Urse inof his friends and acquaintances, accjdental, conjunction of cir-secret

      Open/ secret

    2. gluttony

      performative

    3. and when Gurov grew cold to themtheir beauty excited his hatred, and the lace on their linen seemed to himlike scales.

      Ok Freud! Ok freudian analysis

    4. and he immediately looked round him, anxiously wonder-ing whether any one had seen them.

      open performative- nervous because of the cultural norms brought on

    5. who would themselveshave been glad to sin if they had been able;

      sin-- perosnal performative

    6. Her expression, her gait, her dress,and the way she did her hair told him that she was a lady, that she wasmarried, that she was in Yalta for the first time and alone, and that shewas dull there

      Open performatives?

    7. Experience often repeated, truly bitter experience, had taught him longago that with decent people, especially Moscow people— always slow tomove and irresolute —every intimacy, which at first so agreeably diversi-fies life and appears a light and charming adventure, inevitably grows intoa regular problem of extreme intricacy, and in the long run the situationbecomes unbearable.

      Dmitri open performative-- intimacy disorder,, freudian?

    8. She read a great deal, used phonetic spell-ing, called her husband, not Dmitri, but Dimitri, and he secretly consid-ered her unintelligent, narrow, inelegant, was afraid of her, and did notlike to be at home. He had begun being unfaithful to her long ago— hadbeen unfaithful to her often, and, probably on that account, almost alwaysspoke ill of women, and when they were talked about in his presence,used to call them the lower race.

      Closed performatives for Dmitri

    9. called her simply “the lady with the dog

      Constative language but the act of repetition creates the performative subject

    10. ouS ofmedium height, wearing a Wmt; a white Pomer-anTnddXX7snhe8meeJ'hedrhien'

      The clothes the lady wears and her dog are both open performative actions

    Annotators

    1. the possibilities ofvariation in repetition

      Butler seems to be arguing counteractively to Foucault's view on power structures here. Foucault claims one should work to redefine and exist outside power structures to make significant change. Butler suggests that power is given to individuals who value the opposition of power strucutres

    2. Work in a range of fields seems tobe converging in its investigation of the ways in which subjects areproduced by unwarranted if inevitable positings of unity' andidentity,

      Literary fields of study converge on subject study

    3. we findsomething like a common mechanism.

      In every literary theorist structure there is a common conflict in the identification of a subject

      "common mechanism"

    4. Foucault notes in The History ofSexuality that the emergence, in the 19th centuiy, of medical andpsychiatric discourses defining homosexuals as a deviant classfacilitated social control, but also made possiblethe formation of a ‘reverse’ discourse: homosexuality began tospeak in its own behalf, to demand that its legitimacy or ‘naturality’be acknowledged, often in the same vocabulary, using the samecategories by which it was medically disqualified

      Group identification by non-members of that group can allow the group to anti-identify, thereby forming identity

    5. Ultimately,psychoanalysis reaffirms the lesson one might draw from the mostserious and celebrated novels: that identity is a failure;

      Psychoanlaysis reaffirms the lesson we draw from celerbated texts: identity is a failure

    6. Jacques Lacan’s account of what he calls ‘the mirror stage’ locatesthe beginnings of identity in the moment when the infantidentifies with his or her image in the mirror, perceiving himselfor herself as whole, as what he or she wants to be.

      Does Lacan's theory only account for the modern identity? What about before mirrors?

    7. Thus, the basis of sexual identity is anidentification with a parent: one desires as the parent does, as ifimitating the parent’s desire and becoming a rival for the lovedobject.

      Freud is wrong here I think? Why would I like boys just because my mother does?

    8. discourse

      Beginning of discourse discussion

    9. The champions of literary educationhave hoped, on the contrary, that literature would make us betterpeople through vicarious experience and the mechanismsof identification.

      Coin flip part two

    10. Literature has long beenblamed for encouraging the young to see themselves as charactersin novels and to seek fulfilment in analogous ways

      Coin Flip part one

    11. Theorists have therefore argued that novels, by making theindividuality of the individual their central focus, construct anideology of individual identity whose neglect of larger socialissues critics should question.

      Authors write characters individually without considering the imposition of group culture and theorists argue critics should consider this.

    12. The power of literary representations depends, I suggested inChapter 2, on their special combination of singularity andexemplarity

      Subjects require a combination of singularity and exemplarity ; in other words, characters should exemplify conflicts while remaining interesting

    13. If the possibilities of thought and action are determinedby a series of systems which the subject does not control or evenunderstand, then the subject is ‘decentred’ in the sense that it is nota source or centre to which one refers to explain events.

      Foucault says if our environment shapes our experience, the subject is not the center of the experience

    14. dominant modern tradition in the study of literature has treatedthe individuality of the individual as something given, a core which is109

      The dominant examination of the subject is an individual that is not questioned. The individual can be used to explain actions

    15. first, is the selfsomething given or something made and, second, should it beconceived in individual or in social terms?

      four strands of modern thought on the subject

      • is the self something given or made, and should it be conceived in individual or in social terms?
  3. Sep 2023