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Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship
Christina Marcucci
7 episodes
1 week ago
Welcome to Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship. This podcast integrates the voices of English literary scholars, graduate students, and general readers as we openly discuss, celebrate, and critique the work of author Sally Rooney. Rooney's oeuvre has gained mass popularity worldwide, but has equally been celebrated as a feat of literary fiction by scholars and critics; this combination of popularity and prestige makes Rooney’s novels a productive site for critical engagement among different readers. Thank you for being here! Instagram: @readingrooney
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All content for Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship is the property of Christina Marcucci and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Welcome to Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship. This podcast integrates the voices of English literary scholars, graduate students, and general readers as we openly discuss, celebrate, and critique the work of author Sally Rooney. Rooney's oeuvre has gained mass popularity worldwide, but has equally been celebrated as a feat of literary fiction by scholars and critics; this combination of popularity and prestige makes Rooney’s novels a productive site for critical engagement among different readers. Thank you for being here! Instagram: @readingrooney
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Episodes (7/7)
Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship
Rooney, Millennial Fiction, and the Literary Middlebrow with Professor Alexander Manshel

In this episode I am joined by Professor Alexander Manshel to break down some of the defining characteristics of the literary middlebrow, millennial fiction, and the rise of literary TV adaptations. We also explore the renewed public interest in the identity of the author, and how the belief that Rooney's work is autofiction bolsters both book sales and her cultural prestige. 

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3 years ago
1 hour 1 minute 59 seconds

Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship
Normal People with Normal Malaise: Labour and Mental Health with Cassandra Luca

What is "the millennial condition", and why does it evoke "malaise"? What do these terms even mean? If anxiety is a normal and expected psychological and physiological reaction to exploitative labour conditions, hustle culture, and the looming threat of climate change, what is the point of pathologizing it as a mental illness? Many (if not all) of Rooney's characters invoke these questions through their own relationships to labour, sexual/romantic intimacy, and friendship. In this episode, Cassandra Luca joins me to interrogate how structures and systems of capitalism negatively impact our personal connections and overall wellbeing vis-a-vis Normal People and Beautiful World, Where Are You. 

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3 years ago
42 minutes 37 seconds

Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship
What the Heck is Historical Materialism? Breaking Down the Basics of Marxist Theory with Professor Sandeep Banerjee

No, but really, what the heck is historical materialism? Professor Sandeep Banerjee from McGill University joins me to break down the basics of Marxist Theory (better known as historical materialism), and dialectics. Sally Rooney is a self-proclaimed Marxist, and there has been a lot of buzz about how her particular style reveals her commitments to this kind of ideology. What does it mean to write 'relationally', and how does Rooney's literary project push back against traditional modes of realism? What makes a novel 'Marxist' beyond attention to class? What does it mean to think about the world dialectically? In this episode, Prof. Banerjee and I think through these questions together vis-a-vis Beautiful World, Where Are You. 

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3 years ago
32 minutes 6 seconds

Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship
Friendship, Solitude, and Transcendent Romance with Genee Latreille

Genee Latreille, an avid reader, communications strategist, and mother of two children joins me in this episode to meditate on friendship, solitude, and the power of love that survives both time and distance in all of Rooney's novels. 


emotional by Barradeen | https://soundcloud.com/barradeen
Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US

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3 years ago
39 minutes 23 seconds

Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship
Rethinking Frenemies: On Female Friendship and Digital Communication with Emily Farmer
In this episode, Emily Farmer complicates the concept of the "frenemy", typically understood as a strictly oppositional/negational relationship, to a more holistic understanding of the term as something relational and mutually productive. She coins the term "frenmity" (a combination of 'friend' and 'enmity') to describe this specific (and all too common) type of female friendship. The 'frenmity' relationship is not exclusive to Rooney's work (think Bobbi and Frances; Alice and Eileen), but is a trope that has begun to surface in other contemporary novels such as Mona Awad's Bunny, Sheila Heti's How Should A Person Be?, and Elena Ferrante's Neapolitan Quartet. Emily further explains how digital technology plays a role in both creating and sustaining the affects of "frenmity" relationships. 
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3 years ago
51 minutes 53 seconds

Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship
Rooney's Feminist Narratology with Professor Tabitha Sparks

In this episode, I am joined by Tabitha Sparks, a professor of English at McGill University and the Associate Dean of Graduate Studies in the Faculty of Arts. We chat about feminist narratology, the autofictional pressures faced by female authors, and the appeal of complex male characters in Rooney's work. 

emotional by Barradeen | https://soundcloud.com/barradeen
Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US



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3 years ago
35 minutes 34 seconds

Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship
The Humanities in Crisis: On the Value of Creative Labour and Spirituality with Marie Trotter

In this episode, PhD candidate Marie Trotter and I find connections between the discourse of the infamous "crisis in the humanities" and Alice's authorial identity crisis in Beautiful World, Where Are You (2021). We also explore themes of spirituality, religion, and the search for meaning in the novel. 


emotional by Barradeen | https://soundcloud.com/barradeen
Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US

Show more...
3 years ago
35 minutes 50 seconds

Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship
Welcome to Reading Rooney: An Exercise in Collaborative Scholarship. This podcast integrates the voices of English literary scholars, graduate students, and general readers as we openly discuss, celebrate, and critique the work of author Sally Rooney. Rooney's oeuvre has gained mass popularity worldwide, but has equally been celebrated as a feat of literary fiction by scholars and critics; this combination of popularity and prestige makes Rooney’s novels a productive site for critical engagement among different readers. Thank you for being here! Instagram: @readingrooney