22 Feb 2007
O'Connell, ''Narrative Collusion and Occlusion in Melville's 'Benito Cereno'''
Trackbacks
MT QuickPost |
Check Latest Trackbackshttp://blogs.setonhill.edu/mt/mt-tb.cgi/8097
A very sneaky narrator
Excerpt: "The narrator structures a reading response that likewise seves self-interest and vanity; readers are invited to see Delano's confusions as innocence and to view their own subsequent confusion through the same lense...Readers are not aksed to believe D...
Weblog: Denamarie Ercolani
Tracked: February 17, 2007 9:53 PM
Excerpt: "The narrator structures a reading response that likewise seves self-interest and vanity; readers are invited to see Delano's confusions as innocence and to view their own subsequent confusion through the same lense...Readers are not aksed to believe D...
Weblog: Denamarie Ercolani
Tracked: February 17, 2007 9:53 PM
Melville, You Liar
Excerpt: "The narrator is a shadow figure in 'Benito Cereno' who operates in the background, stirring the pot and adding murkiness that appears unnecessay to the plot (unleess a crucial plot element is seen to be the creation of confusion, not...
Weblog: Special K
Tracked: February 18, 2007 1:05 PM
Excerpt: "The narrator is a shadow figure in 'Benito Cereno' who operates in the background, stirring the pot and adding murkiness that appears unnecessay to the plot (unleess a crucial plot element is seen to be the creation of confusion, not...
Weblog: Special K
Tracked: February 18, 2007 1:05 PM
Irony, Irony, Irony
Excerpt: I believe the final irony of "Benito Cereno" is the extent to which it borrows and extends the rhetorical strategy or targeting the reader, "getting under the skin," in order to make a powerful antislavery argument. Okay, last week Melville...
Weblog: DavidMoio
Tracked: February 18, 2007 10:02 PM
Excerpt: I believe the final irony of "Benito Cereno" is the extent to which it borrows and extends the rhetorical strategy or targeting the reader, "getting under the skin," in order to make a powerful antislavery argument. Okay, last week Melville...
Weblog: DavidMoio
Tracked: February 18, 2007 10:02 PM
O'Connell and the Important Narrator
Excerpt: O'Connell, ''Narrative Collusion and Occlusion in Melville's 'Benito Cereno''' -- Jerz EL312 (Literary Criticism)...
Weblog: The Gentle Giant
Tracked: February 19, 2007 3:23 PM
Excerpt: O'Connell, ''Narrative Collusion and Occlusion in Melville's 'Benito Cereno''' -- Jerz EL312 (Literary Criticism)...
Weblog: The Gentle Giant
Tracked: February 19, 2007 3:23 PM
EL312: Melville's meaningful ambiguity: Bad reader
Excerpt: I don't know if it's shallow of me to like the large headings in the text, but I was nostalgic for textbooks for days of yore when I read the O'Connell essay... (Anyone want to reminisce about old textbooks? I...
Weblog: Sugarpacket
Tracked: February 19, 2007 4:10 PM
Excerpt: I don't know if it's shallow of me to like the large headings in the text, but I was nostalgic for textbooks for days of yore when I read the O'Connell essay... (Anyone want to reminisce about old textbooks? I...
Weblog: Sugarpacket
Tracked: February 19, 2007 4:10 PM
Insert Mission Impossible music here
Excerpt: I knew that as I read "Benito Cereno" there was something fishy going on. I also could feel the foreshadow, as some of you may remember me say before, that was occuring in the short story. I never even imagined...
Weblog: ~Luna Dreams~
Tracked: February 19, 2007 4:30 PM
Excerpt: I knew that as I read "Benito Cereno" there was something fishy going on. I also could feel the foreshadow, as some of you may remember me say before, that was occuring in the short story. I never even imagined...
Weblog: ~Luna Dreams~
Tracked: February 19, 2007 4:30 PM
Is it Always About Me?
Excerpt: O'Connell, ''Narrative Collusion and Occlusion in Melville's 'Benito Cereno''' -- Jerz EL312 (Literary Criticism) Well after reading Iser's essay, I should have known other people were going to say there were more types of writers, I mean it could not...
Weblog: GinaBurgese
Tracked: February 19, 2007 4:33 PM
Excerpt: O'Connell, ''Narrative Collusion and Occlusion in Melville's 'Benito Cereno''' -- Jerz EL312 (Literary Criticism) Well after reading Iser's essay, I should have known other people were going to say there were more types of writers, I mean it could not...
Weblog: GinaBurgese
Tracked: February 19, 2007 4:33 PM
You've been a bad, bad reader.
Excerpt: O'Connell, ''Narrative Collusion and Occlusion in Melville's 'Benito Cereno''' -- Jerz EL312 (Literary Criticism)...
Weblog: MitchellSteele
Tracked: February 19, 2007 7:34 PM
Excerpt: O'Connell, ''Narrative Collusion and Occlusion in Melville's 'Benito Cereno''' -- Jerz EL312 (Literary Criticism)...
Weblog: MitchellSteele
Tracked: February 19, 2007 7:34 PM
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/ErinWaite/2007/02/oconnell_gets_s.html
Posted by: Erin at February 16, 2007 10:41 AMCheck Out my Blog:
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/KevinHinton/2007/02/old_mcdonalds_t.html
Posted by: Kevin "Kelo The Great" Hinton at February 18, 2007 10:02 PMSorry, wrong link
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/KevinHinton/2007/02/oconnells_cloud.html#more
What Is and What Isn't In "Benito"
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/KevinMcGinnis/2007/02/what_is_and_wha.html
Posted by: Kevin at February 20, 2007 10:41 AMPost a comment