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by Jessica Alexander
[Zeynab’s] film asks audience members to change how they view the displaced. But to do this they must change how they view themselves, and they don’t want to. So, they twist in their seats, feeling scrutinized and provoked.
Subterrane – Valérie Bah
[Zeynab’s] film asks audience members to change how they view the displaced. But to do this they must change how they view themselves, and they don’t want to. So, they twist in their seats, feeling scrutinized and provoked.
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by The Editors
This special issue of the FULL STOP QUARTERLY will aim to hold folklore as a prism through which to view connection, the self, and the future. . . . It will explore folklore in and as literature, as process, and as performance.
Call for Pitches
This special issue of the FULL STOP QUARTERLY will aim to hold folklore as a prism through which to view connection, the self, and the future. . . . It will explore folklore in and as literature, as process, and as performance.
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w/ Mike Corrao
Men taught me that I was indestructible early on, and continue to so frequently to the point that I understand now that I am immortal. When will men learn that I am indestructible, and they are the ones destroying themselves?
Laura Paul
Men taught me that I was indestructible early on, and continue to so frequently to the point that I understand now that I am immortal. When will men learn that I am indestructible, and they are the ones destroying themselves?
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by Yasmin Desouki
Through evocative prose and incisive characterization, Azem has performed a small miracle: a short novel that powerfully scrutinizes every element of contemporary Israeli society, and the illusory narratives driving the endeavor.
The Book of Disappearance – Ibtisam Azem
Through evocative prose and incisive characterization, Azem has performed a small miracle: a short novel that powerfully scrutinizes every element of contemporary Israeli society, and the illusory narratives driving the endeavor.
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by Jessica Alexander
[Zeynab’s] film asks audience members to change how they view the displaced. But to do this they must change how they view themselves, and they don’t want to. So, they twist in their seats, feeling scrutinized and provoked.
Subterrane – Valérie Bah
[Zeynab’s] film asks audience members to change how they view the displaced. But to do this they must change how they view themselves, and they don’t want to. So, they twist in their seats, feeling scrutinized and provoked.
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by Yasmin Desouki
Through evocative prose and incisive characterization, Azem has performed a small miracle: a short novel that powerfully scrutinizes every element of contemporary Israeli society, and the illusory narratives driving the endeavor.
The Book of Disappearance – Ibtisam Azem
Through evocative prose and incisive characterization, Azem has performed a small miracle: a short novel that powerfully scrutinizes every element of contemporary Israeli society, and the illusory narratives driving the endeavor.
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by Konstantin Mitroshenkov
Everyone (or almost everyone) seems to be perfectly happy living in a chess utopia.
Tabia 32 – Alexei Konakov
Everyone (or almost everyone) seems to be perfectly happy living in a chess utopia.
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by Vika Mujumdar
Writing and photography together . . . become a way . . . to gesture at absence, to make clearer the shape of what is missing in order to more fully read the photograph.
The Use of Photography – Annie Ernaux and Marc Marie
Writing and photography together . . . become a way . . . to gesture at absence, to make clearer the shape of what is missing in order to more fully read the photograph.
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w/ Mike Corrao
Men taught me that I was indestructible early on, and continue to so frequently to the point that I understand now that I am immortal. When will men learn that I am indestructible, and they are the ones destroying themselves?
Laura Paul
Men taught me that I was indestructible early on, and continue to so frequently to the point that I understand now that I am immortal. When will men learn that I am indestructible, and they are the ones destroying themselves?
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w/ Tiffany Troy
A city, and also a language, is not just a product of the literal body, but of the emotional and conceptual possibilities of consciousness itself.
Squinting at the Gold Teeth of the Sun: A Conversation with J. Mae Barizo on Tender Machines
A city, and also a language, is not just a product of the literal body, but of the emotional and conceptual possibilities of consciousness itself.
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w/ Anna Learn
I don’t think I described friendship as a contract; our society already has.
Mariam Rahmani
I don’t think I described friendship as a contract; our society already has.
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w/ Benjamin Parris
I’m much more concerned with character than I am with crime: with the impact of the events – the crime, if you want – on the characters, rather than the crime itself.
Graeme Macrae Burnet
I’m much more concerned with character than I am with crime: with the impact of the events – the crime, if you want – on the characters, rather than the crime itself.
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by Semyon Khokhlov
All of Kluge’s books contribute to one large, ongoing project to build up a toolkit of resistant feelings that readers can use to plot their own ways out.
The Human Situation in the Work of Alexander Kluge
All of Kluge’s books contribute to one large, ongoing project to build up a toolkit of resistant feelings that readers can use to plot their own ways out.
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by Lara Norgaard
Fiction that imagines the world from its so-called “peripheries” may in fact upend the way we perceive the concept of the “center” itself, reorienting the weight of worldliness towards the edge, the margin, the contact zone.
Towards a Postcolonial Politics of Relatability: Translating People from Oetimu by Felix Nesi
Fiction that imagines the world from its so-called “peripheries” may in fact upend the way we perceive the concept of the “center” itself, reorienting the weight of worldliness towards the edge, the margin, the contact zone.
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by Alex Tan
As [Mersal’s] recursive and often discontinuous writing attests, the drive toward progress tends to entail an imperfect erasure, whose traces might resurface—as if through a palimpsest—if only one cared to look.
City Addresses: Iman Mersal’s Rihla through a Dis(-)appearing Cairo
As [Mersal’s] recursive and often discontinuous writing attests, the drive toward progress tends to entail an imperfect erasure, whose traces might resurface—as if through a palimpsest—if only one cared to look.
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by Olivia Muenz
The body can guide the process of its own translation if its author will let it. An expert at adaptation, it already knows how to exist on the page.
The Textbody: Rendering the Body’s Divergences
The body can guide the process of its own translation if its author will let it. An expert at adaptation, it already knows how to exist on the page.
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by The Editors
This special issue of the FULL STOP QUARTERLY will aim to hold folklore as a prism through which to view connection, the self, and the future. . . . It will explore folklore in and as literature, as process, and as performance.
Call for Pitches
This special issue of the FULL STOP QUARTERLY will aim to hold folklore as a prism through which to view connection, the self, and the future. . . . It will explore folklore in and as literature, as process, and as performance.
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by The Editors
In times like ours, times of fracture, depravity and upheaval—times which are really not that different than any other time on earth, except for the speed and scale at which violence is exercised—what is the value of art?
Call for Pitches
In times like ours, times of fracture, depravity and upheaval—times which are really not that different than any other time on earth, except for the speed and scale at which violence is exercised—what is the value of art?
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by Michelle Chan Schmidt
Read the introduction to our latest issue of the Full Stop Quarterly, “Literary Dis(-)appearances in (Post)colonial Cities.”
Dis(-)appearing Cities or: How I Learned to Stop Walking and Love the Empire
Read the introduction to our latest issue of the Full Stop Quarterly, “Literary Dis(-)appearances in (Post)colonial Cities.”
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by The Editors
Get to know our 2024 Full Stop Editorial Fellows, Keely Shinners and Annalise Peters!
Introducing the Full Stop Editorial Fellows
Get to know our 2024 Full Stop Editorial Fellows, Keely Shinners and Annalise Peters!