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  • Home
  • Issues
    • 2020s
      • Issue 11 2022
      • Issue 10 2020-21
      • Issue 9 2020
    • 2010s
      • Issue 8 2018-19
      • Issue 7 2018
      • Issue 6 2017
      • Issue 5 2016
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      • Issue 3 2014
      • Issue 2 2010
    • 2000s
      • Issue 1 2009
    • ARCHIVE
      • IJAS ONLINE 2009-
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    • “‘Normal People’ Indeed!”: Anne Tyler, Sally Rooney, and the Narrative of Youthful Quirk

      Cecilia Donohue
      Articles, Issue 10 2020-21
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    • “Seeming Strangeness”: Mina Loy’s Poetics of Disruption and Julia Kristeva’s Semiotic/Symbolic Model

      Eva Isherwood-Wallace
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      Natalie Schriefer
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      Richard Hargy
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      Lily Ní Dhomhnaill
    • ‘The Ethics of Quantum Colonialism’: Navigating American Racial Anxiety in N.K. Jemisin’s The City We Became

      Carolann North
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      Issue 11 2022, Reviews, Uncategorized
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      Jan Benes
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      Noel O'Shea
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      Caroline Schroeter and Sarah McCreedy
      Interviews, Issue 9 2020
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      Ellen Rowley
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READ MORE:
  • “Seeming Strangeness”: Mina Loy’s Poetics of Disruption and Julia Kristeva’s Semiotic/Symbolic Model
  • Cold Reality: Revisions of War in John Knowles’ ‘Phineas’ and A Separate Peace
  • Review: Baumgartner, South to Freedom: Runaway Slaves to Mexico and the Road to the Civil War
  • Review: Katherine Manthorne, Restless Enterprise: The Art and Life of Eliza Pratt Greatorex.

Author Andrew Cunning

Andrew Cunning

Andrew Cunning is a PhD candidate at Queen’s University Belfast. He works on Marilynne Robinson, with a special focus on the theological significance of her writing, both fiction and essays. He holds a MA in Theology/Philosophy from Queens.

“The Empty Mirror”: Selfhood and the Utility of Language in Marilynne Robinson’s Housekeeping

Andrew Cunning
Articles, Issue 6 2017
We remain unknown to ourselves. Nieztsche, On the Genealogy of Morals 3. Nietzsche places this declaration right at the beginning of his Genealogy of Morals (1887) as an unequivocal statement of fact. It ... Read More...
EISSN (2009-2377)