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Volume 52.2 Table of Contents - La corónica Commons CONTENTS FROM THE EDITOR Michelle M. Hamilton DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/cor.2024.a982354 IN MEMORIAM: JOHN LIHANI (1927-2024) HARVEY L. SHARRER (1940-2024) Charles Faulhaber DOI: https://doi.org/10...

Vol. 52.2 is now available on Project Muse. Featuring articles by Giles, Talavera Pagán, Udaondo Alegre, Cárdenas-Rotunno, and a special forum on Henry Berlin's "Alone Together: Poetics of the Passions in Late Medieval Iberia." For TOC see lcclacoronica.org/journal/volu... #projectmuse

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Review alert! ✍️ ‘Popular Radicalism and the Unemployed in Chicago during the Great Depression' by Chris Wright has been reviewed in the journal ‘Labour/Le Travail’. Read here ➡️ tinyurl.com/49jpz2v3. Buy: tinyurl.com/39n6t7cp @cuny.edu #ProjectMUSE #AnthemPress #GreatDepression #bookreview

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Find out more in "Confusion, Controversy, and Quarantine: The Muncie Smallpox Epidemic of 1893" by William Eidson, in our December 1990 issue, available online through IU ScholarWorks. #vaccines #smallpox #Muncie #ProjectMuse #IUScholarWorks

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Congratulations to @projectmuse.bsky.social on meeting its #sustainability goal for 2025! IReL is delighted to have played a small role in this achievement by providing our members with access to #ProjectMUSE and benefiting its #SubscribeToOpen initiative. #S2O

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📚Want to take River Teeth wherever you go? Check out Project MUSE!📚

Project MUSE promotes the creation and dissemination of essential humanities and social science resources through collaboration with libraries, publishers, and scholars worldwide.
#RiverTeeth #cnf #ProjectMUSE #essaysthatmatter

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My review of “Spirits of Blood, Spirits of Breath” by Barbara Alice Mann, in #NAIS journal vol.5. At #ProjectMuse

It's #Indigenous correction of Western interference & biased disdain for Native wisdom and realities other Europeans appropriated and erased. #booksky

muse.jhu.edu/pub/23/artic...

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From now until February 21st, enjoy COMPLIMENTARY ACCESS to Korean Journal of Communication on Project Muse! muse.jhu.edu/journal/873
#KACA #koreanjournalofcommunication #ProjectMuse

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50th Anniversary

50th Anniversary

Fifty years of La corónica: our anniversary volume 50 available on #ProjectMuse, free and without subscription. Check out the essays and critical dialogues from the past fifty years of the journal. Visit the TOC at lcclacoronica.org/journal/volu... the articles.

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Read more about Douglass's visit to Indianapolis and the pioneering work of Moses Broyles, pastor, educator, and activist, in "We Have a Right to Live in This Country" in our March 2024 issue. #projectmuse #Blackhistory #Baptisthistory #FrederickDouglass #Indiana

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Broyles would go on to become pastor of Second Baptist Church of Indianapolis and serve as a community leader until his death in 1882. For more on Broyles's remarkable life, see J. Michael Raley's article in the March 2024 issue of the IMH. #projectmuse #Blackhistory #Baptisthistory

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The Ark also featured news and stories that connected Lebanese and Syrian immigrants to the larger Arab world. Prof. Edward Curtis's article, published in the March 2024 issue of the IMH, offers a compelling history of a significant, largely unknown, ethnic newspaper in the Midwest. #projectmuse

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From our March 2024 issue: Prof. Edward Curtis examines the history of the Syrian Ark, an Indianapolis-based newspaper that, from 1936 to 1954, chronicled Arab, Syrian, and Lebanese midwestern life. Look for the most recent years of the IMH on Project Muse. #projectmuse

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On the left, the cover of the latest issue of Studies in the Fantastic, with a full-page collage photo that makes it appear as if a woman is made entirely of bones. Eerie but beautiful.

On the left, the cover of the latest issue of Studies in the Fantastic, with a full-page collage photo that makes it appear as if a woman is made entirely of bones. Eerie but beautiful.

On the right, David Duchovny as Fox Mulder and Gillian Anderson as Dana Scully from THE X-FILES. They are standing in a clearing outside a cornfield, dressed in suits, and shrinking back in astonishment from something offscreen.

On the right, David Duchovny as Fox Mulder and Gillian Anderson as Dana Scully from THE X-FILES. They are standing in a clearing outside a cornfield, dressed in suits, and shrinking back in astonishment from something offscreen.

Studies in the Fantastic is dedicated to spooky TV w/a retrospective on THE X-FILES and its best "monsters of the week" + essays on THE LAST OF US and demon realism. Read #horror #ProjectMuse @jordanscarroll.bsky.social @anyahvdl.bsky.social @gennewman.bsky.social #horror
muse.jhu.edu/issue/53292

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On the left, a screenshot of the article "Erasing Chicago: A Comparative Analysis of Child's Play (dir. by Tom Holland, 1988) and Child's Play (dir. by Lars Klevberg, 2019)" in plain text. On the right, a still from CHILD'S PLAY (1988) in which Chucky the red-headed killer doll looks menacingly down at a victim, who he's about to beat with the thick yardstick he's wielding.

On the left, a screenshot of the article "Erasing Chicago: A Comparative Analysis of Child's Play (dir. by Tom Holland, 1988) and Child's Play (dir. by Lars Klevberg, 2019)" in plain text. On the right, a still from CHILD'S PLAY (1988) in which Chucky the red-headed killer doll looks menacingly down at a victim, who he's about to beat with the thick yardstick he's wielding.

That Chucky is just a Midwestern guy at heart, don'cha know? Alice Tremea's new essay looks at CHILD'S PLAY (1988 & 2019) and how the city of Chicago is depicted as the host of doll rampage. #ProjectMuse #MiddleWestReview #horror
muse.jhu.edu/pub/17/artic...

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On the left, a screenshot of the article "Neoliberal Horror: It Follows & the Time of Urban Progress," in plain text. On the right, a still from IT FOLLOWS (2014) in which the primary young adult characters walk around a derelict house in Detroit.

On the left, a screenshot of the article "Neoliberal Horror: It Follows & the Time of Urban Progress," in plain text. On the right, a still from IT FOLLOWS (2014) in which the primary young adult characters walk around a derelict house in Detroit.

Dale Pattison proposes that "It" follows suburban Detroit, dragging its racist-economic history with it. "Neoliberal Horror: It Follows & the Time of Urban Progress" is new from J Narrative Theory #ProjectMuse. #horror
doi.org/10.1353/jnt....

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On the left, the cover of the latest issue of Canadian Review of American Studies featuring an abstract painting with broad swaths of black, red, white, and pink. On the right, a still from TV's STRANGER THINGS showing character Elle/Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) dressed in a hospital gown, staring intently forward, with blood trickling from her nose and eyes.

On the left, the cover of the latest issue of Canadian Review of American Studies featuring an abstract painting with broad swaths of black, red, white, and pink. On the right, a still from TV's STRANGER THINGS showing character Elle/Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) dressed in a hospital gown, staring intently forward, with blood trickling from her nose and eyes.

Let's check up north, shall we? Canadian Review of American Studies has essays from Brent Yergensen chasing the elusive evil of the serial killer all the way to Edvard Munch's "The Scream" & Carlen Lavigne on the feminine horror in STRANGER THINGS. #ProjectMuse #horror
muse.jhu.edu/issue/53158

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On the left, a screenshot of the article "Bomb Voyage: The USS Indianapolis disaster in American Cinema, National Memory & Jaws" in plain, black and white text. On the right, a still from the movie JAWS (1975) in which sea captain character Quint (Robert Shaw), a grizzled middle-aged White man with a scruffy half-beard, looks intently offscreen as a he tells a story.

On the left, a screenshot of the article "Bomb Voyage: The USS Indianapolis disaster in American Cinema, National Memory & Jaws" in plain, black and white text. On the right, a still from the movie JAWS (1975) in which sea captain character Quint (Robert Shaw), a grizzled middle-aged White man with a scruffy half-beard, looks intently offscreen as a he tells a story.

"Lifeless eyes, black eyes, like a doll's eyes." Sebastian Croft dives deep into history and Quint's famous monologue in a new essay, "Bomb Voyage: The USS Indianapolis disaster in American Cinema, National Memory & Jaws." From Film & History #ProjectMuse #horror
doi.org/10.1353/flm....

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On the left, a screenshot of the article "Between Handheld Camera and Steadicam: The Body-Mounted Cinematography of Seconds (1966) and Its Legacies" in plain text. On the right, a still from the 1966 black-and-white movie SECONDS in which we see through a fish-eye lens a surgical scene. The middle portion of the lens exaggerates the sweaty panic of the patient, gagged on a table, while doctors roam around hm with scary-looking instruments.

On the left, a screenshot of the article "Between Handheld Camera and Steadicam: The Body-Mounted Cinematography of Seconds (1966) and Its Legacies" in plain text. On the right, a still from the 1966 black-and-white movie SECONDS in which we see through a fish-eye lens a surgical scene. The middle portion of the lens exaggerates the sweaty panic of the patient, gagged on a table, while doctors roam around hm with scary-looking instruments.

GoPro, meet your grandpa: the body-mounted camera. Cooper Long explains the cinematic tech used in John Frankenheimer's surgical sci-fi thriller SECONDS (1966) & later films like REQUIEM FOR A DREAM. In the latest Film History, just landed on #ProjectMuse. #horror
muse.jhu.edu/pub/3/articl...

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On the left, the cover of Journal of Cinema and Media Studies vol. 63 no.3, with the chapters written in plain text, white background on the top, light blue on the bottom. On the right, a still from the film THE BIRDS in which lead character Melanie Daniels (played by Tippi Hedren), wearing a black suit and a slight bouffant hairdo in platinum blonde, stands in a pet store among birdcages, thinking in a mischievous way and bringing a pencil to her chin.

On the left, the cover of Journal of Cinema and Media Studies vol. 63 no.3, with the chapters written in plain text, white background on the top, light blue on the bottom. On the right, a still from the film THE BIRDS in which lead character Melanie Daniels (played by Tippi Hedren), wearing a black suit and a slight bouffant hairdo in platinum blonde, stands in a pet store among birdcages, thinking in a mischievous way and bringing a pencil to her chin.

"Back in your gilded cage, Melanie Daniels." The latest JCMS has essays from Emily Naser-Hall on womens' bodily autonomy in law, THE BIRDS, and NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD + Jerome Dent on GET OUT, psychoanalysis, and critical race theory. #ProjectMuse #horror
muse.jhu.edu/issue/52546

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On the left, the cover of issue #16 of Studies in the Fantastic showing a sculpture that vaguely looks like a weathered stone face with its mouth in an open "O." Vaguely unsettling. It is an art piece called “Head on a Bed of Bricks” by Kendra Frorup. On the right, a still from the 2019 film "US" in which an African-American family, led by a mother played by Lupita N'yongo, grabs each other in protection and fear after seeing something frightening.

On the left, the cover of issue #16 of Studies in the Fantastic showing a sculpture that vaguely looks like a weathered stone face with its mouth in an open "O." Vaguely unsettling. It is an art piece called “Head on a Bed of Bricks” by Kendra Frorup. On the right, a still from the 2019 film "US" in which an African-American family, led by a mother played by Lupita N'yongo, grabs each other in protection and fear after seeing something frightening.

Studies in the Fantastic is back in Black! Read commentary on blaxploitation vamps, Afro-futurism/-pessimism in GET OUT - NOPE - US, color among the Stepford Wives + an interview w/ @tananarivedue.bsky.social. #ProjectMuse Ed. Stefanie Dunning #horror
muse.jhu.edu/issue/52260

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On the left, a screenshot of the article "Built to Destroy: The Eugenic Gaze in David Cronenberg's The Brood." On the right, a still from THE BROOD in which Nola (Samantha Eggar) raises her arms up to the sky, her ivory-colored tunic draping, revealing her abdomen (mostly hidden in the photo).

On the left, a screenshot of the article "Built to Destroy: The Eugenic Gaze in David Cronenberg's The Brood." On the right, a still from THE BROOD in which Nola (Samantha Eggar) raises her arms up to the sky, her ivory-colored tunic draping, revealing her abdomen (mostly hidden in the photo).

It's a blood red-letter day when someone writes about THE BROOD (1979). Sarah Manley's new piece for J Lit & Cultural Disability Studies explores Nola's trauma, her rage-babies, & the "eugenic gaze" in Cronenberg's film. #ProjectMuse @livunipress.bsky.social #horror
doi.org/10.3828/jlcd...

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A Reading List for Black History Month 2024 - Community of Literary Magazines and Presses For Black History Month, observed annually during the month of February, we asked our member magazines and presses to share with us some of the books and literary journals they recommend reading in ce...

Poems by #TerranceHayes and #ClaudiaRankine on CLMP’s #BlackHistoryMonth reading list. Both Hayes and Rankine’s work is free to read and download all month on #ProjectMUSE.

www.clmp.org/news/a-readi...

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On the left, the cover and table of contents of the latest issue of Music, Sound, and the Moving Image, with navy bars across the top and bottom and a small black-and-white photo of a metal arc with a human figure in the center. A still from the thriller film WAIT UNTIL DARK showing lead character Susy (Audrey Hepburn) standing in a darkened room, screaming for help.

On the left, the cover and table of contents of the latest issue of Music, Sound, and the Moving Image, with navy bars across the top and bottom and a small black-and-white photo of a metal arc with a human figure in the center. A still from the thriller film WAIT UNTIL DARK showing lead character Susy (Audrey Hepburn) standing in a darkened room, screaming for help.

"Mr. Roat, are you looking at me?" David Cosper hears the musical accompaniment to blind terror in a new essay in Music Sound & the Moving Image, "Through Susy’s Eyes: Sight, Sound, & Subjectivity in Mancini’s Wait Until Dark." #ProjectMuse @livunipress.bsky.social
muse.jhu.edu/pub/105/arti...

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On the left, a screenshot of the first of the two essays mentioned in the post, "Vanilla and/or Vanilla Twist: Political Representation and Equilibrium in Assault on Precinct 13." On the right, a still from the John Carpenter film ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13 in which a little blonde girl in pigtail braids holds an ice cream cone and a spray of blood appears on her chest (because she's been shot).

On the left, a screenshot of the first of the two essays mentioned in the post, "Vanilla and/or Vanilla Twist: Political Representation and Equilibrium in Assault on Precinct 13." On the right, a still from the John Carpenter film ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13 in which a little blonde girl in pigtail braids holds an ice cream cone and a spray of blood appears on her chest (because she's been shot).

Emma Hamilton & Alistair Rolls give us a blood-tinged vanilla-twist of essays on ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13 (1974), one on its intertextuality & the other on its reflection of American social order. Read them #ProjectMuse via J Asia-Pacific Pop Culture. #horror
muse.jhu.edu/issue/45165

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On the left, a screenshot of the article "Of Oozing Walls and Bloody Pools: Horror Film, Water Infrastructure, and Feminist Critique." On the right, a still from the 2002 film DARK WATER in which a girl sits in front of an elevator shaft that is geysering a tall spray of brackish water.

On the left, a screenshot of the article "Of Oozing Walls and Bloody Pools: Horror Film, Water Infrastructure, and Feminist Critique." On the right, a still from the 2002 film DARK WATER in which a girl sits in front of an elevator shaft that is geysering a tall spray of brackish water.

In horror films like DARK WATER & IT FOLLOWS, "Oozing Walls and Bloody Pools" are water infrastructures bound to women. Read Johanna Isaacson's Marxist-feminist take on the subject in the journal symplokē via #ProjectMuse. #horror
muse.jhu.edu/pub/17/artic...

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On the left, a screenshot of the article "In the Defense of Punks and Monsters: Julia Ducournau & Titane." On the right, a still from the beginning of the film TITANE, in which the lead character Alexia (as a young girl) is fitted with a medical brace on her head and shoulders, resembling a crown of thorns.

On the left, a screenshot of the article "In the Defense of Punks and Monsters: Julia Ducournau & Titane." On the right, a still from the beginning of the film TITANE, in which the lead character Alexia (as a young girl) is fitted with a medical brace on her head and shoulders, resembling a crown of thorns.

Maybe it's not *technically* an Xmas movie, but there is a Christ figure, a miraculous birth & a fairy tale ethos. Read Michèle Bacholle's new essay "In the Defense of Punks and Monsters: Julia Ducournau & Titane" in The French Review via #ProjectMuse.
muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/articl...

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On the left, a screenshot of the article "Seeing Horror through the Lens of Health: Embodying Dissociative Identity Disorder in The Babadook." On the right, a still from the movie THE BABADOOK in which main character Amelia, a 40-ish blonde woman, in a nursing uniform, looking unkempt and harried.

On the left, a screenshot of the article "Seeing Horror through the Lens of Health: Embodying Dissociative Identity Disorder in The Babadook." On the right, a still from the movie THE BABADOOK in which main character Amelia, a 40-ish blonde woman, in a nursing uniform, looking unkempt and harried.

"You start to change when I get in!" THE BABADOOK is often interpreted in terms of grief, but Paul Mitchell sees the shadow of Dissociative Identity Disorder in Amelia's plight. Read his new essay in the journal Literature & Medicine via #ProjectMuse. #horror
doi.org/10.1353/lm.2...

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On the left, the cover of the latest issue of the journal Science Fiction Film & Television, black background with a screen shot from the film THE PURGE (2015) showing two White women standing casually in front of a large suburban home, with big smiles. On the right, a still from the 2015 film SHIN GODZILLA, showing the title kaiju with his lizard-like, sharp-toothed mouth fully open, shooting out a bright pink stream of energy.

On the left, the cover of the latest issue of the journal Science Fiction Film & Television, black background with a screen shot from the film THE PURGE (2015) showing two White women standing casually in front of a large suburban home, with big smiles. On the right, a still from the 2015 film SHIN GODZILLA, showing the title kaiju with his lizard-like, sharp-toothed mouth fully open, shooting out a bright pink stream of energy.

The new Science Fiction Film & Television issue has essays on the kaiju-human connection in SHIN GODZILLA (2016) and the feminist liberation, or lack thereof, in MEDUSA (2020). Timothy S. Murphy, Phillip Zapkin, via #ProjectMuse. #horror #godzilla
www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/toc/sfftv/16/3

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Während die Basiskollektion des #ProjectMuse von relativ vielen Bibliotheken lizenziert ist, ist der Zugang zur wesentlich größeren Premium Collection sehr selten. Romanistisch Forschende können darauf im Rahmen der Lizenzen des FID #Romanistik zugreifen: https://t.co/8JfEN7IpkJ

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Während die Basiskollektion des #ProjectMuse von relativ vielen Bibliotheken lizenziert ist, ist der Zugang zur wesentlich größeren Premium Collection sehr selten. Romanistisch Forschende können darauf im Rahmen der Lizenzen des FID #Romanistik zugreifen: https://t.co/8JfEN7IpkJ

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