IJES 2025, v. 25, n. 1
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- PublicationOpen AccessCortés Vieco, Francisco José. (2021). Bearing Liminality, Laboring White Ink: Pregnancy and Childbirth in Women’s Literature. Oxford: Peter Lang. Pages: 280. ISBN: 978-1-80079-013-1.(Universidad de Murcia, Servicio de Publicaciones., 2025) Celdrán-Noguera, Lucía; Filología InglesaEs reseña de: Bearing liminality, laboring white ink: pregnancy and childbirth in women’s literature / Francisco José Cortés Vieco. -- Oxford : Peter Lang, 2021.
- PublicationOpen AccessAcross the shadowy landscape of memory: a relational reading of liminal traumas in Anita Rau Badami’s Can you hear the nightbird call?(Universidad de Murcia, Servicio de Publicaciones., 2025) Llano Busta, Andrea; Universidad de Oviedo. Facultad de Filosofía y Letras. Departamento de Filología Inglesa, Francesa y Alemana.Liminal trauma narratives provide access to the formal representation and the affective dimension of trauma. Anita Rau Badami’s multigenerational and transnational novel Can You Hear the Nightbird Call? (2006) is a case in point, in which in-betweenness is not merely a source of affliction but may develop into a stepping stone to a belated understanding of past tragedies in twentieth-century India and Canada. Through a relational and dialogical approach encompassing Indra’s net, postmemory, rhizomatic theory, and multidirectional memory, liminality is addressed in the family and historical spheres, tracing vertical and horizontal connections between characters and episodes, which, it is argued, challenge event-based models of trauma studies, stress the importance of emotional alliances, and promote the establishment of communities of memory. Ultimately, chronologies and hierarchies are discarded in favour of network arrangements as the most suitable way to deal with interconnected traumas.
- PublicationOpen AccessDe la Cruz-Cabanillas, Isabel. (2023). A Collection of Sundrie Approved Receipts: Study and Edition of Glasgow University Library, Ferguson MS 43. Alcalá de Henares: Editorial Universidad de Alcalá. Pages:140. ISBN: 978-84-18979-42-2.(Universidad de Murcia, Servicio de Publicaciones., 2025) Soriano-Jiménez, Carlos; Sin departamento asociado.Es reseña de: A collection of sundrie approved receipts : study and edition of Glasgow University Library, Ferguson MS 43 / Isabel de la Cruz Cabanillas. -- Universidad de Alcalá, Editorial Universidad de Alcalá, 2023. Ediciones críticas, 9. -- ISBN 9788418979118.
- PublicationOpen AccessRodríguez Salas, Gerardo.(2023). Vivir sola es morir: el modernismo comunitario de Katherine Mansfield. Granada: Editorial Comares. Pages: 104. ISBN: 978-84-1369-604-1.(Universidad de Murcia, Servicio de Publicaciones., 2025) Pasquín Martínez, Jose María; Sin departamento asociado.Es reseña de: Vivir sola es morir: el modernismo comunitario de Katherine Mansfield / Gerardo Rodríguez Salas. -- Editorial Comares, 2023. -- ISBN 978-84-1369-604-1.
- PublicationOpen AccessCorporeal abjection and hopefulness in Oscar Wilde’s “Charmides” (1881).(Universidad de Murcia, Servicio de Publicaciones., 2025) Hueso-Vasallo, Manuel; Universidad de Málaga. Facultad de Filosofía y Letras.This paper addresses the potential relationship between corporality, abjection, and hope in Oscar Wilde’s “Charmides” (1881). The main aim of inspecting this connection is to establish how Wilde makes use of abjection in order to defend the idea that sexual dissidence can, indeed, offer the possibility of hope. In other words, the paper focuses on how Wilde describes abject bodies and abject bodily acts in the poem in a way that ultimately defies the social and moral conventions of his period. It argues that acts that may be considered abject –such as same-sex desire– can be hopeful when addressed from a different perspective. This paper hopes to establish a clear connection between the poem, the abject, and Wilde’s defiance of the sexual mores of his period.
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