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Res Gestae

Things done, or maybe things read.

Written by Bronte CronsberryFebruary 7, 2019

On Beowulf and How to Train Your Dragon: Creating a Fiction of the Past

Separated by over a thousand years Beowulf and How to Train your Dragon exist in very different mediums and in very different contexts. Beowulf is an epic poem written in Old English that traces the life of a monster killing hero as the moves from traveller to king to his ultimate demise at the hands […]

Written by Bronte CronsberryJanuary 13, 2019January 13, 2019

When Difficult is Beautiful: Christopher Tolkien and the Legacy of Middle Earth

JRR Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy is often considered a modern masterpiece, an artful construction and the keystone work of a genre. The trilogy is supported not only by several other works that he published during his life like The Hobbit or The Adventures of Tom Bombadil but also by the thousands of […]

Written by Bronte CronsberryDecember 23, 2018December 25, 2018

This Makes Me Uncomfortable: On Reading Through Black Spruce and Angela’s Ashes

Because suffering and general misery seem to be fairly common topics in the books English teachers assign as class readings the experience of reading these books can often be uncomfortable for the reader. The subject of whether serious topics improve the quality of literature or the role the reader should have in the analysis of […]

Written by Bronte CronsberryDecember 15, 2018March 30, 2019

The Narrative Of Power on a University Syllabus

English classes come with a syllabus, a list of works that someone has decided are important and has curated into a course. If someone were reading independently, making their own list up along as they went it might take them years to have read all the books that appear on a single reading list and […]

Written by Bronte CronsberryDecember 12, 2018December 25, 2018

Finding Space: Thoughts on Edward Burtynsky and Robert Houle

I dislike attempting to move through crowded spaces and this dislike is intensified when I am attempting to make a connection with art or history in an exhibition. However while trying to get a moment to take in the photographs at the Anthropocene exhibition at the Art Gallery of Ontario my distaste felt fairly ironic. […]

Written by Bronte CronsberryNovember 22, 2018December 25, 2018

Gods and Their Followers: On Reading The Dune Chronicles and A Canticle for Leibowitz

Religion is a central part of real world cultures around the world and since art imitates life it also becomes a central part of the fictional worlds that authors create. The appearance of these religions changes depending on the genres that they are places within but regardless of what forms they take fictional theologies can […]

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