Mocking Bird Technologies : : The Poetics of Parroting, Mimicry, and Other Starling Tropes / / ed. by Melanie D. Holm, Christopher GoGwilt.

Contributors: Madeleine Brainerd, Joe Conway, Fraser Easton, Christopher GoGwilt, Shari Goldberg, Melanie D. Holm, Sarah Kay, Kaori T. Kitao, Holt V. Meyer, Isabel A. Moore, Fawzia Mustafa, Gavin Sourgen.​Mocking Bird Technologies brings together a range of perspectives to offer an extended meditati...

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spelling Mocking Bird Technologies : The Poetics of Parroting, Mimicry, and Other Starling Tropes / ed. by Melanie D. Holm, Christopher GoGwilt.
New York, NY : Fordham University Press, [2018]
©2018
1 online resource (320 p.)
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Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction. Parrots and Starlings -- 1. "O Friends, There Are No Friends": The Aesthetics of Avian Sympathy in Defoe and Sterne -- 2. The Avian Challenge of Cotton Mather's Biblia Americana; or, The Pigeon Effect -- 3. Smart's Professors: Birdsong and Rhetorical Agency in Jubilate Agno -- 4. A Volatile Unity: Coleridge, Starling Murmurations, and Romantic Form -- 5. Words Are for the Birds: "Non- reasoning Creatures Capable of Speech" in the Writings of Schreber and Poe -- 6. Splitting the Lyric Lark; or, Dickinson's Music Box -- 7. The Starling's Whistle: Autophilology and the Order of Osip Mandel'shtam's Birds -- 8. Colonial and Postcolonial Birds of Game, Games of Bird -- 9. Of Mimicry, Birds, and Words: The Technology of Starling Song in European, American, and Indonesian Poetry -- 10. Yogini and Mynah Bird: On the Poetics and Politics of Transspecies Meditation -- Afterword. A Starling Manifesto for Mocking Bird Technologies -- Coda. Tornada, in Starling Form -- List of Contributors -- Index
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec online access with authorization star
Contributors: Madeleine Brainerd, Joe Conway, Fraser Easton, Christopher GoGwilt, Shari Goldberg, Melanie D. Holm, Sarah Kay, Kaori T. Kitao, Holt V. Meyer, Isabel A. Moore, Fawzia Mustafa, Gavin Sourgen.​Mocking Bird Technologies brings together a range of perspectives to offer an extended meditation on bird mimicry in literature: the way birds mimic humans, the way humans mimic birds, and the way mimicry of any kind involves technologies that extend across as well as beyond languages and species. The essays examine the historical, poetic, and semiotic problem of mimesis exemplified both by the imitative behavior of parrots, starlings, and other mocking birds, and by the poetic trope of such birds in a range of literary and philological traditions. Drawing from a cross-section of traditional periods and fields in literary studies (18th-century studies, romantic studies, early American studies, 20th-century studies, and postcolonial studies), the collection offers new models for combining comparative and global studies of literature and culture.EditorsChristopher GoGwilt is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Fordham University. He is the author of The Passage of Literature: Genealogies of Modernism in Conrad, Rhys, and Pramoedya (Oxford, 2011), The Fiction of Geopolitics: Afterimages of Culture from Wilkie Collins to Alfred Hitchcock (Stanford, 2000), and The Invention of the West: Joseph Conrad and the Double-Mapping of Europe and Empire (Stanford, 1995).Melanie D. Holm is Assistant Professor of the English Department and Graduate Program of Literature and Criticism at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. She also teaches in the university's Women's and Gender Studies program. Her scholarly focus is on eighteenth-century literature and skepticism.ContributorsMadeleine Brainerd taught at Washington University in St. Louis and at Excelsior College. Since 2004 she has taught therapeutic yoga and medical qi gong in New York City, at the Integral Yoga Institute, Kenshikai Dojo, Gouverneur Hospital, and other venues. She studies histories of yoga's intersections with ecological in/justice, animality, and affect theory.Joe Conway is an Assistant Professor of American Literature at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. His articles have appeared or are scheduled to appear in the journals Women's Studies, Early American Literature, and Nineteenth-Century Contexts. He is currently at work on a monograph about the social life of antebellum money that charts how discourses of noneconomic phenomena such as medicine, race, nationalism, and aesthetics informed nineteenth-century debates about what constitutes good money.Fraser Easton is Associate Professor of English, University of Waterloo, Canada. A specialist in eighteenth-century literature, he has published on Jane Austen, Daniel Defoe, Maria Edgeworth, and Christopher Smart, as well as on newspaper records and historical accounts of passing women in the eighteenth century.Shari Goldberg is Assistant Professor of English at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. She is the author of Quiet Testimony: A Theory of Witnessing from Nineteenth-Century American Literature (Fordham, 2013). She has also published essays on silence, politics, and personhood in American literature. Her current research focuses on late-nineteenth-century models of mind and person in narrative and psychological writing.Sarah Kay teaches French and Medieval Studies at New York University. She has written widely on medieval literature across languages, genres, and periods; her work combines the study of medieval texts, especially troubadour songs, with philosophical and theoretical inquiry. Her two most recent books are Parrots and Nightingales: Troubadour Quotations and the Development of European Poetry (2013) and Animal Skins and the Reading Self in Medieval Latin and French Bestiaries (2017).Kaori Kitao (William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of Art History, Emerita, Swarthmore College) taught art history at Swarthmore College from 1966 to 2001. She was born in Tokyo and studied architecture at UC Berkeley and art history at Harvard. Her main specialization is Italian renaissance and baroque art; she has also taught courses in cinema history, material culture, urban studies, and Japanese architecture.Holt V. Meyer is Professor of Slavic Studies at Erfurt University. He is the author of Romantische Orientierung (1995) and numerous articles and has co-edited the collections Juden und Judentum in Literatur und Film des slavischen Sprachraumes. Die geniale Epoche (1999), Inventing Slavia (2005), Schiller: Gedenken-Vergessen-Lesen (2010), and Gagarin als Archivkörper und Erinnerungsfigur (2014). He is co-editor of the new book series Spatio-Temporality. Practices-Concepts- Media (De Gruyter). He is currently working on a book about the official Stalinist Pushkin celebrations of 1949.Isabel (Annie) Moore completed her Ph.D. in comparative literature at the University of California-Irvine. From 2011 to 2013, she held a postdoctoral fellowship in English at the University of Victoria. She has published on Contemporary Irish and Canadian poetry, and her book project is titled The Ends of Lyric Life: A Theory of Biopoetics.Fawzia Mustafa is Professor of English and African and African American Studies at Fordham University. She also teaches in the university's Comparative Literature and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies Programs. The author of V. S. Naipaul (1995), she has published numerous articles on postcolonial literature and development.Gavin Sourgen is Visiting Assistant Professor of English at the Harriet L. Wilkes Honors College of Florida Atlantic University. He completed his D.Phil. at Balliol College (Oxford) in 2013, concentrating on the transitional poetics of Lord Byron's verse, and has published on Byron, Coleridge, and romantic aesthetics in general.
Issued also in print.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 02. Mrz 2022)
Mimicry (Biology).
Mockingbirds.
Starlings.
Animal Studies.
Literary Studies.
Philosophy & Theory.
LITERARY CRITICISM / Semiotics & Theory. bisacsh
birds.
comparative.
global.
literature.
mimesis.
mimicry.
parrots.
poetics.
starlings.
Brainerd, Madeleine, contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
Conway, Joe, contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
Easton, Fraser, contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
GoGwilt, Christopher, contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
GoGwilt, Christopher, editor. edt http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edt
Goldberg, Shari, contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
Holm, Melanie D., contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
Holm, Melanie D., editor. edt http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edt
Kay, Sarah, contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
Kitao, Kaori, contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
Moore, Isabel A., contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
Mustafa, Fawzia, contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
Sourgen, Gavin, contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
Vincent Meyer, Holt, contributor. ctb https://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/ctb
Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Fordham University Press Complete eBook-Package 2018 9783110729009
print 9780823278480
https://doi.org/10.1515/9780823278510?locatt=mode:legacy
https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9780823278510
Cover https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9780823278510/original
language English
format eBook
author2 Brainerd, Madeleine,
Brainerd, Madeleine,
Conway, Joe,
Conway, Joe,
Easton, Fraser,
Easton, Fraser,
GoGwilt, Christopher,
GoGwilt, Christopher,
GoGwilt, Christopher,
GoGwilt, Christopher,
Goldberg, Shari,
Goldberg, Shari,
Holm, Melanie D.,
Holm, Melanie D.,
Holm, Melanie D.,
Holm, Melanie D.,
Kay, Sarah,
Kay, Sarah,
Kitao, Kaori,
Kitao, Kaori,
Moore, Isabel A.,
Moore, Isabel A.,
Mustafa, Fawzia,
Mustafa, Fawzia,
Sourgen, Gavin,
Sourgen, Gavin,
Vincent Meyer, Holt,
Vincent Meyer, Holt,
author_facet Brainerd, Madeleine,
Brainerd, Madeleine,
Conway, Joe,
Conway, Joe,
Easton, Fraser,
Easton, Fraser,
GoGwilt, Christopher,
GoGwilt, Christopher,
GoGwilt, Christopher,
GoGwilt, Christopher,
Goldberg, Shari,
Goldberg, Shari,
Holm, Melanie D.,
Holm, Melanie D.,
Holm, Melanie D.,
Holm, Melanie D.,
Kay, Sarah,
Kay, Sarah,
Kitao, Kaori,
Kitao, Kaori,
Moore, Isabel A.,
Moore, Isabel A.,
Mustafa, Fawzia,
Mustafa, Fawzia,
Sourgen, Gavin,
Sourgen, Gavin,
Vincent Meyer, Holt,
Vincent Meyer, Holt,
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title Mocking Bird Technologies : The Poetics of Parroting, Mimicry, and Other Starling Tropes /
spellingShingle Mocking Bird Technologies : The Poetics of Parroting, Mimicry, and Other Starling Tropes /
Frontmatter --
Contents --
Preface --
Introduction. Parrots and Starlings --
1. "O Friends, There Are No Friends": The Aesthetics of Avian Sympathy in Defoe and Sterne --
2. The Avian Challenge of Cotton Mather's Biblia Americana; or, The Pigeon Effect --
3. Smart's Professors: Birdsong and Rhetorical Agency in Jubilate Agno --
4. A Volatile Unity: Coleridge, Starling Murmurations, and Romantic Form --
5. Words Are for the Birds: "Non- reasoning Creatures Capable of Speech" in the Writings of Schreber and Poe --
6. Splitting the Lyric Lark; or, Dickinson's Music Box --
7. The Starling's Whistle: Autophilology and the Order of Osip Mandel'shtam's Birds --
8. Colonial and Postcolonial Birds of Game, Games of Bird --
9. Of Mimicry, Birds, and Words: The Technology of Starling Song in European, American, and Indonesian Poetry --
10. Yogini and Mynah Bird: On the Poetics and Politics of Transspecies Meditation --
Afterword. A Starling Manifesto for Mocking Bird Technologies --
Coda. Tornada, in Starling Form --
List of Contributors --
Index
title_sub The Poetics of Parroting, Mimicry, and Other Starling Tropes /
title_full Mocking Bird Technologies : The Poetics of Parroting, Mimicry, and Other Starling Tropes / ed. by Melanie D. Holm, Christopher GoGwilt.
title_fullStr Mocking Bird Technologies : The Poetics of Parroting, Mimicry, and Other Starling Tropes / ed. by Melanie D. Holm, Christopher GoGwilt.
title_full_unstemmed Mocking Bird Technologies : The Poetics of Parroting, Mimicry, and Other Starling Tropes / ed. by Melanie D. Holm, Christopher GoGwilt.
title_auth Mocking Bird Technologies : The Poetics of Parroting, Mimicry, and Other Starling Tropes /
title_alt Frontmatter --
Contents --
Preface --
Introduction. Parrots and Starlings --
1. "O Friends, There Are No Friends": The Aesthetics of Avian Sympathy in Defoe and Sterne --
2. The Avian Challenge of Cotton Mather's Biblia Americana; or, The Pigeon Effect --
3. Smart's Professors: Birdsong and Rhetorical Agency in Jubilate Agno --
4. A Volatile Unity: Coleridge, Starling Murmurations, and Romantic Form --
5. Words Are for the Birds: "Non- reasoning Creatures Capable of Speech" in the Writings of Schreber and Poe --
6. Splitting the Lyric Lark; or, Dickinson's Music Box --
7. The Starling's Whistle: Autophilology and the Order of Osip Mandel'shtam's Birds --
8. Colonial and Postcolonial Birds of Game, Games of Bird --
9. Of Mimicry, Birds, and Words: The Technology of Starling Song in European, American, and Indonesian Poetry --
10. Yogini and Mynah Bird: On the Poetics and Politics of Transspecies Meditation --
Afterword. A Starling Manifesto for Mocking Bird Technologies --
Coda. Tornada, in Starling Form --
List of Contributors --
Index
title_new Mocking Bird Technologies :
title_sort mocking bird technologies : the poetics of parroting, mimicry, and other starling tropes /
publisher Fordham University Press,
publishDate 2018
physical 1 online resource (320 p.)
Issued also in print.
contents Frontmatter --
Contents --
Preface --
Introduction. Parrots and Starlings --
1. "O Friends, There Are No Friends": The Aesthetics of Avian Sympathy in Defoe and Sterne --
2. The Avian Challenge of Cotton Mather's Biblia Americana; or, The Pigeon Effect --
3. Smart's Professors: Birdsong and Rhetorical Agency in Jubilate Agno --
4. A Volatile Unity: Coleridge, Starling Murmurations, and Romantic Form --
5. Words Are for the Birds: "Non- reasoning Creatures Capable of Speech" in the Writings of Schreber and Poe --
6. Splitting the Lyric Lark; or, Dickinson's Music Box --
7. The Starling's Whistle: Autophilology and the Order of Osip Mandel'shtam's Birds --
8. Colonial and Postcolonial Birds of Game, Games of Bird --
9. Of Mimicry, Birds, and Words: The Technology of Starling Song in European, American, and Indonesian Poetry --
10. Yogini and Mynah Bird: On the Poetics and Politics of Transspecies Meditation --
Afterword. A Starling Manifesto for Mocking Bird Technologies --
Coda. Tornada, in Starling Form --
List of Contributors --
Index
isbn 9780823278510
9783110729009
9780823278480
callnumber-first Q - Science
callnumber-subject QL - Zoology
callnumber-label QL696
callnumber-sort QL 3696 P278
url https://doi.org/10.1515/9780823278510?locatt=mode:legacy
https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9780823278510
https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9780823278510/original
illustrated Not Illustrated
dewey-hundreds 500 - Science
dewey-tens 590 - Animals (Zoology)
dewey-ones 598 - Birds
dewey-full 598.8/63
dewey-sort 3598.8 263
dewey-raw 598.8/63
dewey-search 598.8/63
doi_str_mv 10.1515/9780823278510?locatt=mode:legacy
oclc_num 1017000177
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Moore, Fawzia Mustafa, Gavin Sourgen.​Mocking Bird Technologies brings together a range of perspectives to offer an extended meditation on bird mimicry in literature: the way birds mimic humans, the way humans mimic birds, and the way mimicry of any kind involves technologies that extend across as well as beyond languages and species. The essays examine the historical, poetic, and semiotic problem of mimesis exemplified both by the imitative behavior of parrots, starlings, and other mocking birds, and by the poetic trope of such birds in a range of literary and philological traditions. Drawing from a cross-section of traditional periods and fields in literary studies (18th-century studies, romantic studies, early American studies, 20th-century studies, and postcolonial studies), the collection offers new models for combining comparative and global studies of literature and culture.EditorsChristopher GoGwilt is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Fordham University. He is the author of The Passage of Literature: Genealogies of Modernism in Conrad, Rhys, and Pramoedya (Oxford, 2011), The Fiction of Geopolitics: Afterimages of Culture from Wilkie Collins to Alfred Hitchcock (Stanford, 2000), and The Invention of the West: Joseph Conrad and the Double-Mapping of Europe and Empire (Stanford, 1995).Melanie D. Holm is Assistant Professor of the English Department and Graduate Program of Literature and Criticism at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. She also teaches in the university's Women's and Gender Studies program. Her scholarly focus is on eighteenth-century literature and skepticism.ContributorsMadeleine Brainerd taught at Washington University in St. Louis and at Excelsior College. Since 2004 she has taught therapeutic yoga and medical qi gong in New York City, at the Integral Yoga Institute, Kenshikai Dojo, Gouverneur Hospital, and other venues. She studies histories of yoga's intersections with ecological in/justice, animality, and affect theory.Joe Conway is an Assistant Professor of American Literature at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. His articles have appeared or are scheduled to appear in the journals Women's Studies, Early American Literature, and Nineteenth-Century Contexts. He is currently at work on a monograph about the social life of antebellum money that charts how discourses of noneconomic phenomena such as medicine, race, nationalism, and aesthetics informed nineteenth-century debates about what constitutes good money.Fraser Easton is Associate Professor of English, University of Waterloo, Canada. A specialist in eighteenth-century literature, he has published on Jane Austen, Daniel Defoe, Maria Edgeworth, and Christopher Smart, as well as on newspaper records and historical accounts of passing women in the eighteenth century.Shari Goldberg is Assistant Professor of English at Franklin &amp; Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. She is the author of Quiet Testimony: A Theory of Witnessing from Nineteenth-Century American Literature (Fordham, 2013). She has also published essays on silence, politics, and personhood in American literature. Her current research focuses on late-nineteenth-century models of mind and person in narrative and psychological writing.Sarah Kay teaches French and Medieval Studies at New York University. She has written widely on medieval literature across languages, genres, and periods; her work combines the study of medieval texts, especially troubadour songs, with philosophical and theoretical inquiry. Her two most recent books are Parrots and Nightingales: Troubadour Quotations and the Development of European Poetry (2013) and Animal Skins and the Reading Self in Medieval Latin and French Bestiaries (2017).Kaori Kitao (William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of Art History, Emerita, Swarthmore College) taught art history at Swarthmore College from 1966 to 2001. She was born in Tokyo and studied architecture at UC Berkeley and art history at Harvard. Her main specialization is Italian renaissance and baroque art; she has also taught courses in cinema history, material culture, urban studies, and Japanese architecture.Holt V. Meyer is Professor of Slavic Studies at Erfurt University. He is the author of Romantische Orientierung (1995) and numerous articles and has co-edited the collections Juden und Judentum in Literatur und Film des slavischen Sprachraumes. Die geniale Epoche (1999), Inventing Slavia (2005), Schiller: Gedenken-Vergessen-Lesen (2010), and Gagarin als Archivkörper und Erinnerungsfigur (2014). He is co-editor of the new book series Spatio-Temporality. Practices-Concepts- Media (De Gruyter). He is currently working on a book about the official Stalinist Pushkin celebrations of 1949.Isabel (Annie) Moore completed her Ph.D. in comparative literature at the University of California-Irvine. From 2011 to 2013, she held a postdoctoral fellowship in English at the University of Victoria. She has published on Contemporary Irish and Canadian poetry, and her book project is titled The Ends of Lyric Life: A Theory of Biopoetics.Fawzia Mustafa is Professor of English and African and African American Studies at Fordham University. She also teaches in the university's Comparative Literature and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies Programs. The author of V. S. Naipaul (1995), she has published numerous articles on postcolonial literature and development.Gavin Sourgen is Visiting Assistant Professor of English at the Harriet L. Wilkes Honors College of Florida Atlantic University. He completed his D.Phil. at Balliol College (Oxford) in 2013, concentrating on the transitional poetics of Lord Byron's verse, and has published on Byron, Coleridge, and romantic aesthetics in general.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="530" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Issued also in print.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="538" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="546" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">In English.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 02. 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