FACS - Florida Atlantic Comparative Studies

Catastrophe and Representation - Volume 9, 2006-2007

by Peggy Schaller, et al.

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Author website: http://www.language.fau.edu/
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Synopsis

IN THIS ISSUE:
Foreword
PEGGY SCHALLER
Saisir le désordre: Expressions littéraires de la catastrophe; modalités et enjeux de sa verbalisation
AMINA TAHRI
The Lesson of the Titanic
BREE HOSKIN
Places That Disaster Leave Behind
BRUCE JANZ
Nuclear Families and Nuclear Catastrophe in Alain Resnais’ Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959)
PAUL WILLIAMS
Personal History, Collective History: Mapping Shock and the Work of Analogy
AMANDA IRWIN WILKINS
It’s What Isn’t There That Is: Catastrophe, Denial, and Non-Representation in Arshile Gorky’s Art
KIM THERIAULT

The editors of the Florida Atlantic Comparative Studies literary journal invite submissions on any topic for upcoming issues. FACS is an interdisciplinary journal providing a forum for comparative study in the arts, humanities, language, culture and social sciences.
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About the Author

Amina Tahri Escalera received her M.A. in French Literature from Université de Nantes (France) in 2003, and is currently pursuing her Ph.D. there. Her research to date has focused on the work of late nineteeth and twentieth century French fiction. Her dissertation investigates Edmond Rostand’s oeuvre from the perspective of its literary and rhetorical devices in the presentation of Rostand’s views on tradition and modernity. Her critical edition of an original play by Rostand, “Faust”, will be published in 2008. Tahri Escalera is instructor of French at Minot State University in North Dakota.

Bree Hoskin recently completed her Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Western Australia. She has published poetry through the University of Western Australia Press and has an upcoming publication in the Literature/Film Quarterly. She currently resides in London.

Bruce Janz is Associate Professor of Humanities in the Department of Philosophy at the Uni