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      <title>ENG 413W John Clares Discussion by </title>
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      <pubDate>2025-06-09 01:32:54 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>If Clare’s poem is a kind of testimony, how does it help us see slow violence that’s often ignored? </title>
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         <pubDate>2025-06-09 14:42:02 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>Nixon argues that slow violence is hard to see or represent. Do you think poetry is an effective tool for making this kind of violence visible? Why might it succeed where facts and reports might not?</title>
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         <pubDate>2025-06-09 14:43:16 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>Are there modern examples of slow violence you can think of that are hidden or overlooked in a similar way to how enclosure was “legalized” but destructive? </title>
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         <pubDate>2025-06-09 14:44:22 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>What’s the significance in personifying Swordy Well? How does it change our perspectives on human treatment towards the land? How would you react to the poem if the land did not have agency?</title>
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         <pubDate>2025-06-09 14:46:42 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>Are there any connections from the Lament to other Indigenous works/concepts we have already read? Ex. Simpson’s Binoijinh Makes a Lovely Discovery or Sparrow’s Know Who You Are and Where You Come From or Robinson’s article on Indigenous Sovereignty. </title>
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         <pubDate>2025-06-09 14:48:39 UTC</pubDate>
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