Found a lump under my armpit. First it was miniature. The pain was not felt. Now rub and increasing. My friends such do not. The other day found out that it can be serious disease. But most likely, obviously fatty lump. Found clear information about this lump. Now I'm not afraid of bad diagnosis. Everything is clear and detail is written down to the smallest detail.
Many have problems with the armpits. There are a lot of microbes. Later arise balls. They can be painful, but not always. It is better to know in advance about this problem. Then there will be no fear of horror. Good, that now I understand this.
[url=http://armpit.info/painful-lump-under-armpit]i have a lump under my armpit[/url]
- ViboNoina
Tackling such tough stuff calls on literary scholars and students alike to practice what Cary Nelson calls the "fierce humanities": "teaching that seeks not merely learning, but unlearning, that seeks to unsettle knowledge and assumptions." The example Nelson draws from his own teaching experience is of a course on Holocaust poetry, the reading of which he describes as "unendurable," but the critical purpose of which "is to help all of us confront the infinite human capacity for evil and to evaluate poetry's capacity to bear witness to it."
This was certainly something that I brushed up against with the reading course in post-apocalyptic lit that I finished in August. Some of the fiction was interesting, but some of it bordered on intolerable - it was a lot of very dark literature to take in all at once. It seemed to make it more worthwhile, though: the confrontation was part of the experience of engaging the sense of the post-apocalyptic as a cultural force and a cultural imagining.
New to the blog but very engaged by it. As I reflect upon the "fierce humanities," I can't help thinking about how Indigenous pain has been marginalized in Canadian literature as "resistance writing." I find this amusing as I recall Osip Mandlestam, Akmatova, Lorca, Ngugi, Steinbeck, Toni Morrison, Gwendolyn Brooks, Ginsberg, Kerouac,
- Marilyn Dumont
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