Newest Article
I Walked With a Zombie: A Liminal (Post)colonial TextA postcolonial reading of I Walked With a Zombie as a reimagining of Jane Eyre set in the West Indies, and the ways in which the film interrogates colonial domination, but mostly reinscribes stereotypically racist views.
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Unexpected Expecting: A Structural Analysis of 2007’s Unplanned Pregnancy Films»
In 2007, no fewer than four films dealing with unplanned pregnancy were released: Knocked Up, Waitress, Juno, and 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days. Would a structural analysis of these films reveal a similarity between the films due to their subjects that transcends other generic considerations, or would the pregnancy plot turn out to be subordinate to the intersecting genres and national origins?
Reaching Toward Postmodernism»
Postmodernism is often seen as a rejection of the totalizing project of modernism and of the Enlightenment; however, literary modernism as exemplified in the works of Virginia Woolf, Joseph Conrad, James Joyce, and others, are as skeptical of the Enlightenment project as postmodernism. This article argues that postmodernism continues to be concerned with the same issues as literary modernism, but simply takes the issues further.
Gurinder Chadha’s Bride and Prejudice is not only a modern, cross-cultural version of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice; it also adapts Bollywood musical traditions to create a film that embodies its message of multicultural understanding in its very form.
Racial Leftist Politics in the Poetry of Langston Hughes»
In the early 1930s, Langston Hughes flirted with Communism, as his poetry from the time period makes clear. However, he never lost sight of his own people and his poetry reflects his desire to unite the plight of the African-American with that of the oppressed worker throughout the world in hopes of a better life for all.
John Boorman’s Excalibur claims to be adapted from Sir Thomas Malory’s Le Morte Darthur, but is in reality drawn from several sources, many of which contradict Malory’s version of the legend; however, by adapting Malory in this way, Boorman is in fact following directly in his footsteps, for Malory also claims to draw from one source but uses many, in addition to his own imagination.
Film Reviews
So Australia is a mess, yes, trying to pack too many varied things into one film that never quite meshed into a cohesive whole. But it was a very comfortable-feeling mess, and I unabashedly loved watching it.
Bonnie & Clyde is one of the very few films that I consider to be essentially perfect, maintaining both our emotional connection to Bonnie and Clyde as well as our emotional distance from what they do. It would’ve been much easier to either make them unlikable villains or give us some reason that explains their actions but Bonnie & Clyde doesn’t let us off so easily.
Book Reviews
A Reader’s Guide to the Twentieth-Century Novel in Britain»
A brief but thorough overview of the subject, from James and Conrad through Modernist and into Postmodern works. An excellent introduction to 20th century British literature.
Howards End: E.M. Forster’s House of Fiction»
Duckworth approaches E.M. Forster’s Howards End using Bahktin’s theory of dialogics, arguing that Forster uses multiple voices to depict but not judge class conflicts in early twentieth-century England.
Capsule Reviews
Be Kind, Rewind»In a struggling New York-area city stands a dying building. It has been condemned, ready to be taken over by fancy apartment developers unless its owner Mr. Fletcher (Danny Glover) can turn a profit on his VHS rental store to make the necessary repairs. When he takes a research trip to find out how to [...]
The Savages»
Estranged siblings Jon and Wendy Savage (Philip Seymour Hoffman and Laura Linney) are forced to care for their aging and increasingly senile father when the woman he lives with dies, leaving him without a home. This is not a particularly exciting proposition to anyone involved – both siblings are playwrights (Jon much more successfully than [...]
Column: Watching the Lists
Amelie Poulain lives and works in Montmartre, but doesn’t connect very deeply with other people. It’s delightful, and it remains one of the two or three best introductions to foreign films for the subtitle-phobic. But it’s a gateway drug to world cinema, and if you like it, move on to the harder stuff.
A straight-laced professor gets angry at his students for lusting after a sexy showgirl, but he feels a bit differently once he actually sees said showgirl. Unfortunately, her seeming reciprocation of his affections may only be an act. Early example of Marlene Dietrich’s innate magnetism.

