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Resistance through Silence in Camus' The Plague

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Thu, Aug 27, 2020 09:34 PM

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Plus: How Annie Oakley Defined the Cinema Cowgirl In Camus's creative work, silence is everywhere. I

Plus: How Annie Oakley Defined the Cinema Cowgirl [] To ensure delivery of your JSTOR Daily please add daily@jstor.org to your address book. [] Weekly Digest [Web Version](3598d/ct0_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] 3598d/ct1_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip [] [Resistance through Silence in Camus's The Plague](3598d/ct1_1/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] By Matthew Blackman [] In Camus's creative work, silence is everywhere. It often stands in stark opposition to the bureaucratic state, bourgeois rationalism, and ideologies that condone “rational murder.” The silences are set in opposition to dominant discourses that justify oppression, violence, and murder in the name of “freedom” or “law and order.” The story of Camus's famous public silence really begins with the publication of The Plague (1947), a novel that has found a new readership in our COVID-19 period. [] [Read More](3598d/ct1_2/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] [] 3598d/ct2_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip [] [Did White People Really Revive Surfing?](3598d/ct2_1/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] By Livia Gershon [] Contrary to the widespread idea that white missionaries stamped out the sport, evidence suggests that Native Hawai‘ians never stopped surfing. [Read more...](3598d/ct2_2/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] [] 3598d/ct3_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip [] [How Annie Oakley Defined the Cinema Cowgirl](3598d/ct3_1/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] By Kristin Hunt [] “Little Sure Shot” was famous for her precision, athleticism, and trademark femininity. [Read more...](3598d/ct3_2/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] [] 3598d/ct4_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip [] [The Text That Stoked Modern Antisemitism](3598d/ct4_1/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] By Erin Blakemore [] What's the history of the vicious The Protocols of the Elders of Zion? [Read more...](3598d/ct4_2/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] ADVERTISEMENT [] Whether you're a new or longtime JSTOR Daily reader, we invite you to be a part of our future. Join our membership today—even $3 a month would mean so much. [Become a member.](3598d/ct5_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] 3598d/ct6_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip [] [Suppressing Native American Voters](3598d/ct6_1/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] By Matthew Wills [] South Dakota has been called “the Mississippi of the North” for its long history of making voting hard for Native Americans. [Read more...](3598d/ct6_2/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] [] 3598d/ct7_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip [] [Plant of the Month: Guava](3598d/ct7_1/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] By Julia Ostmann [] Often classified as an invasive species, guava ignites a longstanding, transnational battle over foreign invaders and local customs. [Read more...](3598d/ct7_2/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) [] [] [] Contact Us 101 Greenwich Street, New York, NY 10006, USA [daily.jstor.org](3598d/ct8_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) | daily@jstor.org | [@JSTOR_Daily](3598d/ct9_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) | [Facebook](3598d/ct10_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip) ©2004-2020 ITHAKA. All Rights Reserved. JSTOR®, the JSTOR logo, and ITHAKA® are registered trademarks of ITHAKA. Interested in advertising with JSTOR Daily? [Contact us](3598d/ct11_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip). If you prefer not to receive email messages from JSTOR Daily in the future, you may [unsubscribe here](3598d/ct12_0/1?sid=TV2%3AcKBe7siip).

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