Author Archives: Therese-Marie Meyer

About Therese-Marie Meyer

Welcome, oh curious one! TM teaches literature at the Institute for English and American Studies.

Under Construction

Obvi­ously, anoth­er long time has passed since the begin­ning of term without any updates or news from me. The reas­ons are man­i­fold: pro­jects, work, admin. Pro­jects: I had planned on open­ing the blog to the web (finally), and chan­ging the entire … Con­tin­ue read­ing

Posted in Allgemein | Leave a comment

To the Unknown Plagiarist

In a Swiftean mood today: and here is the res­ult. Ded­ic­ated to the Unknown Pla­gi­ar­ist. “To steal a thought is no great sin. Research is just a word. Geez, why put a ref­er­ence in? Your dili­gence is absurd! In our mod­ern, shar­ing world An … Con­tin­ue read­ing

Posted in Allgemein | Leave a comment

Slow return

In the pro­cess of bat­tling my way back to health (read: whole­sale slaughter of bac­teria), there was little time left to read up on vari­ous online blogs & news. Pic­ture my sur­prise then, when upon my return to the great … Con­tin­ue read­ing

Posted in Australian Convict Novels | Leave a comment

Mainstream conspiracy theory?

Just in time for our read­ing of the Son­nets (and their adja­cent mys­tery of the ded­ic­a­tion, and Mr. W.H., and was Shakespeare gay or not, or maybe not Shakespeare at all?) Roland Emmerich has pub­lished the trail­er for his upcom­ing … Con­tin­ue read­ing

Posted in Poetry 16th-20th Century | 2 Comments

Utterly sad yet utterly typical…

The Guard­i­an reports today on the deport­a­tion of Eng­lish chil­dren to Aus­tralia, see­ing as there’s a new movie out, Oranges and Sun­shine, about the Eng­lish social work­er who tracked these events and man­aged to bring the people affected togeth­er. The dis­reg­ard … Con­tin­ue read­ing

Posted in Australian Convict Novels | Leave a comment

Master Mistress of my Passion

Twen­ti­eth-cen­tury lan­guage for describ­ing sexu­al beha­viour (and even our tend­ency to pri­or­it­ize sex as a lead­ing human drive) does not fit the beha­viour, or (which is all we have) the rep­res­ent­a­tions of beha­viour of six­teenth-cen­tury males. No one in the … Con­tin­ue read­ing

Posted in Poetry 16th-20th Century | 2 Comments

Marcus Clarke, again

I came across a fas­cin­at­ing post this morn­ing, show­ing the film­ing of Mar­cus Clarke’s For the Term of His Nat­ur­al Life in 1926 includ­ing a kangaroo brought onto the set. To add some Aus­trali­an feel… I’m sure that’s exactly what we’re … Con­tin­ue read­ing

Posted in Australian Convict Novels | Leave a comment

Spatial turn

I haven’t pos­ted for a while, being busy with course pre­par­a­tions, cor­rec­tions, and the writ­ing of my EACLALS con­fer­ence paper on the rep­res­ent­a­tion of Tas­mani­an spaces in con­vict nov­els. (BTW: I prom­ised an update on the GNEL con­fer­ence in Han­over? … Con­tin­ue read­ing

Posted in Allgemein, Australian Convict Novels, Summer 2011 | Leave a comment

Love’s Function

Here’s a poem by E.E. Cum­mings I would have loved to include in the com­ing ter­m’s course read­er but could­n’t … but which I con­sider one of my favour­ites! Love’s func­tion is to fab­ric­ate unknown­ness (known being wish­less but love … Con­tin­ue read­ing

Posted in Poetry 16th-20th Century | 1 Comment

Flash

I’m cur­rently beaver­ing through the syl­labus for the con­vict nov­el sem­in­ar, and could­n’t help noti­cing just how much the wiki­pe­dia por­trait of Mar­cus Clarke rep­res­ents that Vic­tori­an bug­bear: the gen­tle­man. Sed­ate, bearded, respect­able, & some­what sombre. I am sure part … Con­tin­ue read­ing

Posted in Australian Convict Novels | 9 Comments