Wesley R. Bishop Wesley R. Bishop

Behind the Curtain: Popular Culture Roots of the Alternative Right in the Euro-American Realm

“Although “we like to assume that the arc of history will bend inexorably toward justice,” this may be “wishful thinking,” for “unmediated social media” has modified language, and our understanding of “who we are.”[18] QAnon, the spokes site for the anonymous poster, Q, has become the most popular purveyor of these restructured and repurposed anti-Semitic myths, which in their new form have been popularized on Fox News and by Trump (and his administration). According to the followers of the anonymous Q, “the criminals are also known as the Deep State, or cabal, because of how they control things behind the scenes.”[19]  The criminals are represented in the United States by William Jefferson Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, George H. W. Bush, George W. Bush, and most especially Barack Hussein Obama. For Q and his followers, the only heroic American figures fighting the criminal elite were Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump.”

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Wesley R. Bishop Wesley R. Bishop

2022 Artist in Residence: Photo Essay

Every year NMR works with a selected artist as the featured artist of the journal. In 2022, NMR’s artist in residence is Iridessence/Essence Walker, and her project is a photo essay that explores race, fatness, and beauty.

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Wesley R. Bishop Wesley R. Bishop

“Outgrowing Gastarbeiterliteratur”: Germanness Redefined in the Poetry of Zafer Şenocak and Zehra Çirak

Due to the massive migratory movements of the late twentieth- and early twenty-first centuries, the borders that outline the definition of German national identity are now strikingly fluid. Efforts to define “Germanness” in terms of a single common language, religion, ethnicity, or restrictive literary canon fail to encompass—and at times even acknowledge—the complex identities, artistic productions, and experiences of cultural hybridity of at least 20 million Germans with Migrationshintergrund [migration background] and the 11 million people that comprise the Ausländische Bevolkerung [foreign population] of Germany in 2018. In the de facto multicultural nation that Germany is now, Zafer Şenocak, born in Ankara in 1961, and Zehra Çirak, born in Istanbul in 1961, use (and purposefully misuse) German to subvert the aesthetic expectations of classic German poetry.

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Wesley R. Bishop Wesley R. Bishop

Daughter of Orion: Henry Beston’s Progeny, Kate Barnes

Abstract: Henry Beston is well-known for his seminal book, The Outermost House, and other works about the environment and his quest for an earth-centered life. His daughter, Kate Barnes, is a celebrated poet in Maine, where she published three collections of poems and served as the state’s first poet laureate. In this article, I discuss the complicated relationship between Beston and Barnes, articulated in letters and poetry. Barnes’ refers to her rich literary genealogy (her mother was the prolific writer, Elizabeth Coatsworth) in many of her works, but those poems which mine the depths of her relationship with her father are among the most complex in subject and image. Three principal themes emerge in these poems: Beston’s filial regret at having two daughters and no sons; Barnes’ use of mythology to reframe her family narrative; and her celestial kinship with her father. We can see in her last published collection, Kneeling Orion, a father-daughter tension that is partially resolved.

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