Jaime FullerVerified account

@j_fuller

web editor . send pitches to jaime@laphamsquarterly.org.

New York
Joined March 2009

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  1. Retweeted
    Jun 4

    ICYMI I wrote about Else Jerusalem and her novel, The Red House for

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  2. Jun 2

    And then, finally, today, you can read on “Der heilige Skarabäus.”

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  3. Jun 2
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  4. Jun 2

    And wrote about Ignatius Donnelly’s “Caesar’s Column.”

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  5. Jun 2

    An essay on Juanita Harrison’s “My Great, Wide, Beautiful World.”

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  6. Jun 2

    And on Louis Sullivan’s “Kindergarten Chats.”

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  7. Jun 2

    We had write about Philip Wylie’s “Generation of Vipers.”

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  8. Jun 2

    and tried to answer the question “where do best-seller lists come from?”

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  9. Jun 2

    and wrote about Anastasia Verbitskaya’s “The Keys to Happiness.”

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  10. Jun 2

    Our series on forgotten best sellers is done for now (but if someone pitches me another great idea, happy to keep it going). It was a fun project to work on for a whole year. wrote about Edith Wharton’s library.

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  11. Jun 2

    Read this great piece on Else Jerusalem’s “The Red House”: “Voyeurism with a conscience—but voyeurism nonetheless.”

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  12. May 17
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  13. May 17

    “The new mythology lends credence to the keeners’ denigration by ignoring the labor story central to their history. Professional keeners were no more emotional frauds or mere funerary ornament than priests.”

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  14. Retweeted

    My latest for on William Hazlitt’s weird confessional work Liber Amoris.

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  15. May 12

    “I have lost the taste of my food by feverish anxiety; and my favorite beverage…has no moisture in it. Oh! cold, solitary, sepulchral breakfasts.” on “Liber Amoris.”

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  16. May 6

    Read this very fun piece by on trick photography, the nineteenth-century version of impressively edited TikTok videos.

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  17. Retweeted

    Today is a special day: this article I've been working on for months is finally out! I dug into queer/trans archives, how they sustain our lives when so many other outlets are denied to us, and the complexities of remembering a group like ACT UP. I hope you enjoy.

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  18. Retweeted
    Apr 1

    In New York, there are far more memorials for World War I than for the 1918 flu pandemic; 9/11 than the AIDS epidemic. We memorialize selectively. So last winter I wondered: will we memorialize this pandemic? In Staten Island, I looked for an answer:

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  19. Mar 8

    read on a pandemic year. “No such grand monument exists for the victims of the Spanish flu. Their monument … is a deathbed photograph, an empty chair in an exhibition poster, a note from a wife to her husband written with a shaky hand.”

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  20. Retweeted
    Mar 8

    I wrote about Egon Schiele, the Spanish flu, and modernism's contingencies

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