Parties annexes
Bibliography
- Agamben, Giorgio. The Open: Man and Animal. Trans. Kevin Attell. Stanford UP, 2004.
- Arciniega, Lourdes. “Archiving the Future: The Uneasy Relationship between Individual Memory and Communal Artifacts in Station Eleven.” Canadian Review of Comparative Literature 42.2 (2021): 296–310.
- Bennett, Jane. Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things. Duke UP, 2010.
- brown, adrienne maree. Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Shaping Worlds. aK Press, 2017.
- Conaway, Charles. “‘All the World’s a [post-apocalyptic] Stage’: The Future of Shakespeare in Emily St John Mandel’s Station Eleven.” Critical Survey 33.2 (2021): 1–16.
- Eve, Martin Paul. “Reading Very Well for Our Age: Hyperobject Metadata and Global Warming in Emily St John Mandel’s Station Eleven.” Open Library of Humanities, Special Collection: Station Eleven and Twenty-First Century Writing 4.8 (2018): 1–27.
- Feldner, Maximilian. “‘Survival is insufficient’: The Postapocalyptic Imagination of Emily St John Mandel’s Station Eleven.” Anglica 27.1 (2018): 165–79.
- Herren, Graley. “The Prospero of Wonderland; or, Miranda Carroll, Author of Station Eleven.” Comparative Drama 57 (2023): 139–64.
- Leggatt, Matthew. “‘Another World Just Out of Sight’: Remembering or Imagining Utopia in Emily St John Mandel’s Station Eleven.” Open Library of Humanities, Special Collection: Station Eleven and Twenty-First Century Writing 4.8 (2018): 1–23
- Mandel, Emily St John. Station Eleven. Harper Perennial, 2014.
- Méndez-García, Carmen. “Postapocalyptic Curating: Cultural Crises and the Permanence of Art in Emily St John Mandel’s Station Eleven.” Studies in the Literary Imagination 50.1 (2017): 111–30.
- Morra, Linda. “To Discover or to Divine.” Getting Lit with Linda: The Canadian Literature Podcast. Spotify. 24 November 2022. https://open. spotify.com.
- Morra, Linda-, and Gregory Betts. “The Sound of a Silenced Letter: Souvankham Thammavongsa and the Kinetic Archive.” Studies in Canadian Literature 47.1 (2022): 117–30.
- Roy, Wendy. “Trauma and the Ethics of Literary Culture in the Time of Pandemic: Emily St John Mandel’s Station Eleven and Saleema Nawaz’s Songs for the End of the World.” Studies in Canadian Literature 47.1 (2022): 50–72.
- Schaab, Katharine. “Misogyny Survives the Apocalypse: The Collapse of Reproductive Justice in Emily St John Mandel’s Station Eleven and Ling Ma’s Severance.” Women’s Studies 51.1 (2022): 1–17.
- Stewart, Susan. On Longing: Narratives of the Miniature, the Gigantic, the Souvenir, the Collection. Duke UP, 1992.
- Vermeulen, Pieter. “Beauty That Must Die: Station Eleven, Climate Change Fiction, and the Life of Form.” Studies in the Novel 50.1 (2018): 9–25.
- Vouza, Isavella. “Nullifying Topographical, Artistic, and Textual Borders in Emily St John Mandel’s Station Eleven.” 2017. www.asrp.gr.
- West, Mark. “Apocalypse Without Revelation?: Shakespeare, Salvagepunk, and Station Eleven.” Open Journal of Humanities, Special Collection: Station Eleven and Twenty-First Century Writing 4.1 (2018).