This is the twelfth entry in my Links in the Time of Coronavirus series (?), marking a year since the beginning of the pandemic. And whether it was because the semester started again and I’m teaching three classes (and so I have had less time to “surf the internet” [i.e., despairingly look at my phone because there’s nothing else to do]) or because the first full month of the Biden administration was just, um, less filled with news, or whether we’ve reached a holding pattern with regard to the pandemic—just waiting for the number of vaccinated people to increase—there are fewer links here than at probably any point in the last twelve months. As such, I thought I’d start with a section that is usually down the page a bit. Less timely, perhaps, but there were lots of interesting things published over the past month:
Theory and Criticism
Kelly Horan, “More Heart, Less Darkness,” review of Love’s Shadow, by Paul A. Bové.
boundary 2 Editorial Collective, “Does Attention to Language Matter Anymore? Philology, Translation, Criticism.”
Ignacio M. Sánchez Prado, “On Cosmopolitanism and the Love of Literature: Revisiting Harold Bloom through His Final Books.”
Gerry Canavan, “Science Fiction and Utopia in the Anthropocene.”
Mark McGurl, “Unspeakable Conventionality: The Perversity of the Kindle.”
Jane Hu, “Said by Said.”
David Kurnick, “Queer Theory and Literary Criticism’s Melodramas.”
Martin Hägglund, “Marx, Hegel, and the Critique of Religion: A Response.”
Étienne Balibar, “Politics and Science: One Vocation or Two?”
Len Gutkin, “We’re Off to the Method Wars.”





