COVID-19: Inside The U.S.' Battle Against The Coronavirus Outbreak
10 Lines Essay on Covid-19 in English
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Are we ready for COVID-19 as a central theme in literature? - NPR
Reading about plagues or COVID-19 over the last two years was not an entertaining idea for many. But the pandemic has had an impact on literature — and people may be ready for it to enter the...
The Problem With the Pandemic Plot - The New York Times
More than two years into a global health crisis that has reshaped society and daily life, Covid-19 is leaving an inexorable mark on literary fiction.
12 moving essays about life during coronavirus | Vox
Read these 12 moving essays about life during coronavirus. Artists, novelists, critics, and essayists are writing the first draft of history.
‘You just emotionally break’: understanding COVID-19 ...
Writing in Literature and Medicine, RebeccaGarden highlights how COVID-19 narratives of shared vulnerability and suffering have both a unifying power with regard to community and the potential to obscure how vulnerabilities are unequally tied to economic class, race and disability (Garden 2021).
COVID poetry: how a new genre is helping readers to ...
The poet Claire Shaw argues that during the pandemic: We discovered we needed poetry more than ever before – its ability to console and connect, to express sorrow, to find beauty, to create meaning.
Making meaning of the pandemic ‘through the lens of literature’
DavidB.’s graphic novel “Epileptic” has become an important text in helping me conceptualize the discourse surrounding COVID-19. The stigma encompassing Jean-Christophe’s disease is reflective of the idea of illness as taboo.
Pandemic Novels, Reviewed - The New Yorker
Katy Waldman considers recent novels set during the COVID-19 pandemic, including Hari Kunzru’s “Blue Ruin,” Nell Freudenberger’s “The Limits,” Sigrid Nunez’s “The Vulnerables ...
Does the world need COVID novels? — Harvard Gazette
The pandemic may not be over, but pandemic fiction is off and running. Among the COVID-shadowed novels that have hit the shelves in the past year and a half are “Our Country Friends” by Gary Shteyngart, in which eight friends spend lockdown in a house in upstate New York; “Summer,” the last novel in a quartet by Ali Smith; and Louise ...
Life, death, intimacy and privilege: 4 works of COVID fiction ...
Four different authors – Sarah Moss, Roddy Doyle, Anne Tyler and Gary Shteyngart – tell four different stories of life in a time of COVID.
Full article: Reading the lockdown: responding to covid poetry
This article examines the sub-genre of “covid poetry” by integrating text and reader response data analysis to examine the representation of the pandemic experience in Michele Witthaus’ poem “The new shape of fear”.
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Reading about plagues or COVID-19 over the last two years was not an entertaining idea for many. But the pandemic has had an impact on literature — and people may be ready for it to enter the...
More than two years into a global health crisis that has reshaped society and daily life, Covid-19 is leaving an inexorable mark on literary fiction.
Read these 12 moving essays about life during coronavirus. Artists, novelists, critics, and essayists are writing the first draft of history.
Writing in Literature and Medicine, Rebecca Garden highlights how COVID-19 narratives of shared vulnerability and suffering have both a unifying power with regard to community and the potential to obscure how vulnerabilities are unequally tied to economic class, race and disability (Garden 2021).
The poet Claire Shaw argues that during the pandemic: We discovered we needed poetry more than ever before – its ability to console and connect, to express sorrow, to find beauty, to create meaning.
David B.’s graphic novel “Epileptic” has become an important text in helping me conceptualize the discourse surrounding COVID-19. The stigma encompassing Jean-Christophe’s disease is reflective of the idea of illness as taboo.
Katy Waldman considers recent novels set during the COVID-19 pandemic, including Hari Kunzru’s “Blue Ruin,” Nell Freudenberger’s “The Limits,” Sigrid Nunez’s “The Vulnerables ...
The pandemic may not be over, but pandemic fiction is off and running. Among the COVID-shadowed novels that have hit the shelves in the past year and a half are “Our Country Friends” by Gary Shteyngart, in which eight friends spend lockdown in a house in upstate New York; “Summer,” the last novel in a quartet by Ali Smith; and Louise ...
Four different authors – Sarah Moss, Roddy Doyle, Anne Tyler and Gary Shteyngart – tell four different stories of life in a time of COVID.
This article examines the sub-genre of “covid poetry” by integrating text and reader response data analysis to examine the representation of the pandemic experience in Michele Witthaus’ poem “The new shape of fear”.