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Proto - An Undergraduate Humanities Journal, Vol. 3 2012 Realities-Discovered, Created, Envisioned (Paperback)
Loot Price: R342
Discovery Miles 3 420
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Proto - An Undergraduate Humanities Journal, Vol. 3 2012 Realities-Discovered, Created, Envisioned (Paperback)
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Loot Price R342
Discovery Miles 3 420
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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As with our first two issues, the third volume of Proto: An
Undergraduate Humanities Journal features some of the finest
writing and scholarship among undergraduate students in the
Maryland and mid-Atlantic region. This year, as in the past, about
half of the issue is devoted to the top papers from the annual
Undergraduate Conference held at Stevenson University.
Unfortunately, Stevenson University has decided to put the
conference on indefinite hiatus. The journal will carry on despite
this setback; we hope this disappointing news will not deter
Proto's efforts to publish the insights and ideas of today's
emerging scholars. As a sign of the journal's continuing
development, we now have a website At www.protojournal.org,
visitors can browse essays from previous years, download submission
guidelines, contact members of the advisory board, find out more
about our publisher-Loyola University's student-run Apprentice
House Publishing-and link to ordering information for both current
and back issues. We encourage you to visit the site. In this issue,
readers should again be surprised and pleased with the style and
erudition with which students engage a variety of themes. This
year's Undergraduate Conference topic was "Realities-Discovered,
Created, Envisioned." One of the most compelling presentations was
by Tim Powling, whose essay describes the kind of friendship
possible between a dog and a soldier at war. Callie Ingram artfully
examines the complexities of communication in David Foster
Wallace's labyrinthine novel Infinite Jest. Then we turn to Megan
Franey, who argues that the dynamics of the possible realities of
family and self are often best told through the stories we tell one
another. Do we discover or create minds? How we answer this, writes
Amanda Brenner in her lucid essay, points to contrasting approaches
to the idea of artificial intelligence. In the Open Submissions
section, Nathan Dennies focuses on two major writers, Wallace
Stevens and Ernest Hemingway, in order to account for the
significance of shifts in our consciousness. Edward Lasher presents
an imaginative and fragmented reflection about a perplexing figure
named Briley. And Christina Murphy concludes this issue with a
scholarly analysis-in French-of the Spanish film La Vida Perra de
Juanita Narboni. Each accepted admission is reviewed by at least
two members on the editorial board, which consists of humanities
professors from mid-Atlantic colleges and universities. Guidelines
for submission are provided at the end of this issue as well as on
the website. We hope you enjoy this issue, and we look forward to
hearing from you. The Editors: Jean Lee Cole, Department of
English, Loyola University Maryland; Alex Hooke, Department of
Philosophy, Stevenson University
General
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