Categories
Burst
Comics
Fiction
Interviews
Letters & Essays
Media
Misc
Misfit Docs
Music
Poetry
Queen of Pentacles
Queer Translation
Reviews
Satire
Sex
Video Games
Visit berfrois
Skip to content
Home
About Us
Contributors
Search for:
Neil Simon – an American Master of Schlemiel Comedy – Passes
Saving Money, Finding Smallness: On “Downsizing”
Theodor Adorno’s Force Fields and Camille Paglia’s Killing Fields
Mourning Becomes the Schlemiel
The World is Messed Up and Jerry Lewis is Dead
On Kevin Hart’s Schlemiel Tale: The “Jay-Z Pineapple Juice Story”
Drifting in the Clouds: On the Schlemiel, Affect, and Pig Pen
Chronicles of Smallness, or Becoming “Infrathin” in the Digital World
You Look Ridiculous: Don Rickles, Jewish American Anxiety, and Insult Comedy
Gong(ed): Chuck Barris (Charles Hirsch) Has Left the Stage
Women Can Be Schlemiels? Reflecting on Contemporary Schlemiels of the “Opposite Sex”
Shem, Japheth, and Stoom: On James Joyce’s Reading of Japheth
George in Oil, or a Schlemiel on Canvas
A Comical Alphabet of Postmodern Horror: On “Mannix” & Walter Abish’s “Ardor/Awe/Atrocity”
On Thomas Pynchon’s Comical Figurations of Slowness & Sloth
Fat Jews: On Fat Jew and Thomas Pynchon’s Depiction of Nathan “Lardass” Levine
Mortality, Jewishness & Leonard Cohen’s Comedic Moments
The (Sch-Sch) Sounds of a Misfortunate (Sch)lemiel in Wilco’s New Album: Schmilco
Another Kind of Schlemiel: On Gene Wilder, Family, Comedy, Melancholy & Prayer
On Kafka’s Sit Down Comedy
Coming Out of a Daze (A Reflection on Melancholy, Poetry, and You)
On Literary Pain: Comic and Tragic (From John Updike and Franz Kafka to Louis CK)
Sleeplessness, Insomnia and Ambien: On Jonathan Crary’s “24/7”
He Died on Purim: On Garry Shandling, Smallness, Self-Deprecation & The Meta-Schlemiel
Millennials & The Smelly End of Literature
A Worn Out Prophet: On Charles Baudelaire’s Vision of Apocalypse
Umberto Eco’s Last Laugh: On Theology, Philosophy, and The Laughing Creature
Charles Baudelaire, “My Little Melancholy Monkey”
It’s Also a Memory Machine: On Kafka’s American Desk
Seeing Things Differently: Vision, Judgment, and Being (Re)Born in Kafka’s America
Posts navigation
Back to top
Older posts