Mitchell Gauvin
mitchellgauvin.bsky.social
Mitchell Gauvin
@mitchellgauvin.bsky.social
Canadian living in Germany. Teaching/Research on citizenship and literature at Uni Mainz. My book out now: Literature and Citizenship in the Age of Revolution (Routledge, 2025).
My latest fiction is now out in Issue 38 of @nffr.bsky.social! Read (or listen 🔊) below. Check out of the full issue to see more great writing as well as interviews with the contributors.
newflashfiction.com/problems-wit... #fiction #writing #flashfiction
Problems with Zero by Mitchell Gauvin | Issue #38
When Zero came to me after Polygon’s attack, hands like knives cutting wind and flesh, I could see Zero’s hurt at having to endure in this geometry.
newflashfiction.com
September 1, 2025 at 6:25 PM
New flash fiction from me coming in September! 👀 Keep your eyes on the New Flash Fiction Review (@nffr.bsky.social)‬.
July 23, 2025 at 10:35 AM
My first article for the European Relations Association is now out! Confused over what Trump means for Canada and the EU? I breakdown how tariffs, annexation, and Mark Carney are bringing the two regions closer together -- sort of. europeanrelations.com/canada-wants... #TariffWar #tariff
Canada wants to join the EU? – EuropeanRelations.com
europeanrelations.com
April 10, 2025 at 2:25 PM
I return to this poem about once a week. On the surface, Shelley's emphasis on inevitable decay suggests an element of nihilism, but I think instead the poem is an invitation to think about what's truly valuable. Material legacies are fleeting, so what then is left?
Ozymandias
March 18, 2025 at 8:32 AM
Finally found the time to punch out a short story, which is now free to read in Quibble Lit. It's a story born from my childhood growing up in Northern Ontario. Click below and support indie publishers!
www.quibblelit.com/among-us-by-... #fiction #writing #shortstory
Among Us by Mitchell Gauvin — Quibble
www.quibblelit.com
March 8, 2025 at 10:05 AM
Recently re-read Joan Didion's novel PLAY IT AS IT LAYS (1970). Was struck at how contemporary it continues to feel; a deeply nihilistic story that manages to capture the way American culture seems to be constantly spinning towards self-destruction. An enduringly relevant novel. #books #reading
January 21, 2025 at 8:04 PM
Went to a fantastic lecture and chat today by Prof. Dr. Karsten Fitz (Universität Passau) who talked about Indigenous Futurisms and Ryan Singer, a Navajo painter who blends pop culture iconography like Star Wars with contemporary landscapes. Definitely an artist that deserves more attention.
January 20, 2025 at 8:41 PM
Reading Jameson's oft-cited review of DOG DAY AFTERNOON (1975). Interesting point about class consciousness arising from various national traumas, explains middle class sympathy for Al Pacino's character. But the larger issue is the movement towards a different kind of politics and the consumer.
January 19, 2025 at 8:42 PM
Fantastic breakdown by Ben Laude on Glenn Gould. Not just for classical music lovers, this is a meditation on how we engage with art in general.
youtu.be/ei18TjGnOjA?...
How Glenn Gould Broke Classical Music
YouTube video by Ben Laude
youtu.be
January 19, 2025 at 5:10 PM
Been chipping away at this over the last few months. Sprawling book (perhaps even too ambitious of a project) but very revealing of how the complexity of Indigenous presence has been obscured by simplistic histories of conquest.
January 18, 2025 at 9:53 AM
It's surprising/not surprising that 19th-century American imperialism, which treated its sphere of influence as hemispheric, is still relevant for understanding why mainstream narratives of South America treat it as America's "backyard."
What they're describing as the "United States' backyard" is PERU, a place 4000 miles away from the United States
November 20, 2024 at 2:02 PM