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"path": "/2026/05/14/text-and-the-city-in-the-lovely-bones/",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-15T02:39:15.000Z",
"site": "https://stanforddaily.com",
"tags": [
"Reads",
"Arts & Life",
"alice sebold",
"feminism",
"Geroge Harvey",
"Lindsey",
"pennsylvania",
"peter jackson",
"Sexual Assault",
"Susie Salmon",
"text and the city",
"the lovely bones",
"Text and the City: In ‘The Lovely Bones,’ why are dead girls easier to love?",
"The Stanford Daily"
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"textContent": "Alice Sebold’s 2002 novel, “The Lovely Bones” risks romanticizing violence against women rather than confronting it as wrongdoing.\n\nThe post Text and the City: In ‘The Lovely Bones,’ why are dead girls easier to love? appeared first on The Stanford Daily.",
"title": "Text and the City: In ‘The Lovely Bones,’ why are dead girls easier to love?"
}