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http://humanitiesmoments.org/files/original/11/126/adrienne-rich.jpg
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Dublin Core
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Title
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Adrienne Rich
Dublin Core
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Title
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Kluge Scholars
Description
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Humanities Moments contributions from scholars at the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress
Identifier
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kluge-scholars
Moving Image
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Player
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<iframe width="640" height="360" src="https://player.vimeo.com/video/252391594" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="webkitallowfullscreen" mozallowfullscreen="mozallowfullscreen" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen"></iframe>
Dublin Core
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Title
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Literature and Its Worlds of Possibility
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Coccia enlists the words of feminist theorist and poet Adrienne Rich to articulate the power of the humanities: “I came to believe a child’s belief, but also a poet’s … that language, writing, those pages of print could teach me how to live, could tell me what was possible.” Literature can open up worlds of possibility, encapsulating what the humanities can offer us.
Description
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In middle school, Harper Lee’s <em>To Kill a Mockingbird</em> inspired Emily Coccia to imagine the possibilities of the law to bring communities closer to justice. In college, it was the world of critical theory—such as feminist and queer theory—however, that helped her understand the other paths available to those wishing to enact social change.
Contributor
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Emily Coccia, the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress
Identifier
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literature-worlds-of-possibility
Source
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<em>To Kill a Mockingbird</em> by Harper Lee; queer and critical theory by Adrienne Rich and others
Books & Reading
Critical Theory
Feminism
Justice
Lee, Harper
Lesbian Authors
Literature
Queer Theory
Rich, Adrienne
To Kill a Mockingbird
Women Authors
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Dublin Core
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Title
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Television
Source
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Pixabay
Identifier
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television
Text
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Referrer
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On the Humanities webpage
Dublin Core
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Akshita, 24, M.A.
Date
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October 2017
Description
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It was a balmy October night in 2017, when I lay pondering in a tiny rented room in a city that wasn't "home" both literally as well as metaphorically. I wished for a brief distraction from my mundane routine, and then I clicked on <em>A Death in the Gunj</em>, the movie that I noticed each time on the Amazon Prime homepage but ignored. And soon I discovered it was exactly all that I wanted. <br /><br />A story of a college graduate who joins his cousins on a vacation to their ancestral home in a sleepy town of McCluskieganj just to escape the monotony and sadness that enveloped him. The vacation didn't turn out as he had planned. More than a jovial family vacation, it was a weeklong account of his personal struggles with mental health, his peripheral silence, all ensuing in a titular death. This movie resembled many similar struggles that I was grappling with at that time. It brought me pain, shock and tears and has managed to stay with me all through the years. I visit it every now and then. In fact, this movie prompted my interest in Spatial Theory. <br /><br />There aren't any happy memories associated with this movie, but revisiting it every now and then makes me realize how far I have come. It has shaped my whole perspective, and has given me moorings on the intricacies of mental health. This movie will stay with me for a little longer or maybe forever.
Title
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A Movie That Stayed Longer than I Expected
Identifier
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movie-stayed-longer-expected
Source
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<em>A Death in the Gunj </em>(2016)
Critical Theory
Film and Movies
Self-Realization