Monday, March 25, 2019
Freaks of the Core :: Essays Papers
Freaks of the  content Wherein lies the odd attraction and power of the  freakish? Just as often as it introduces us to expressions of common  military man experience, study in the Humanities  in any case introduces us to the decidedly uncommon--to writers, artists and thinkers who  fight down conventional limits of language and narrative, vision and imagination, memory and history, or logic and rationality. For our Freaks of the Core colloquium, we explored the outer limits of human expression and experience. What, we asked, defines the abnormal or the outlandish? the  overzealous or heretical? the illusory or the grotesque? Why  be we commonly drawn to the very uncommon? Nothing, indeed, is more revolting, wrote Thomas De Quincey in his famously freaky Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, than the spectacle of a human being obtruding on our notice his moral ulcers or scars, and  sundering away that decent drapery which time, or  indulging to human frailty, may  bring on drawn ove   r them (1).1 But De Quincey chose to tear away that drapery in his Confessions nevertheless, believing that his outlandish experiences with addiction, poverty and  head game would teach his readers valuable lessons that outweighed any offense. In that hope it is that I have drawn this up, wrote De Quincey, and that must be my apology for breaking through that  thin-skinned and honorable reserve, which, for the most part, restrains us from the public exposure of our own infirmities (1). The essays  under also tear away the decent drapery which covers the sometimes unsightly extremes of human experience, and they do so with similar hopes and reasons. Kimberly Tsau, for example, follows De Quinceys lead in her  analysis of T. S. Eliots The Waste Land, suggesting that among the violence, apathy, and disjointedness of the poem is a call to face and learn from suffering. Her essay, dangling in a Jar, examines how Eliot collects a variety of cultural memories, cutting and pasting them in c   oncert to form a collection that is both terrifying and edifying. In Per Repitio Nos Studiare The Struggles of Abraham and God, Ryan Priester also explores how one learns through repeated suffering. Instead of examining human apathy or submission in the face of pain, however, his examination of the binding of Isaac introduces us to the  eccentric of human rebellion and resistance. Both The Waste Land and the relationship  amongst Abraham and God revolve around the human response to excess and extremity.  
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