Literary theory Books

3663 products


  • Mirages of the Selfe

    Stanford University Press Mirages of the Selfe

    Book SynopsisThrough extensive readings in philosophical, legal, medical, and imaginative writing, this book explores notions and experiences of being a person from European antiquity to Descartes.Trade Review"Reiss has masterfully woven together various threads of personhood into a powerful work on the self . . . This is a work that readers will ponder long after they finish the final page." -- Comitatus

    £66.60

  • Acts of Narrative

    Stanford University Press Acts of Narrative

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis collection brings together essays that reflect on the nature of narrative, literary criticism and history from a variety of theoretical and disciplinary perspectives, ranging from deconstruction, psychoanalysis and trauma theory, to narratology, technology, economics and aesthetics.Trade Review"Acts of Narrative explores different facets of narrative with historical and thematic breadth, and each of the essays is a remarkable narrative act in its own right. Taken as a whole, the collection is a powerful demonstration of how the intersections between psychoanalysis, post-structuralism, and performative theory change our understanding of narrative and its function in cultural life." -Ewa Plonowska Ziarek,University of Notre DameTable of ContentsPreface: The Place of Narrative CarolJacobs ix 1 J. Hillis Miller and the Task of the Critic Henry Sussman 2 Lying Against Death: Out of the Loop J. Hillis Miller 15 3 Waiting in the Wings Diane Elam 31 4 Parting Words: Trauma, Silence, and Survival Cathy Caruth 47 5 The Other Day: The Interpretation of Daydreams Rachel Bowlby 62 6 Difference Behind Similarity: Focalization in Third-Person Center-of-Consciousness and First-Person Retrospective Narration Dan Shen 81 7 The "Telepathy Effect": Notes toward a Reconsideration of Narrative Fiction Nicholas Royle 93 8 Trackings Tom Cohen 110 9 The Rape of the Lock: A Jacobite Aesthetics? Ronald Paulson 130 10 The Serpent in the Wilderness: Space, Place, and Landscape in the Eighteenth Century W J. T Mitchell 146 11 Narrative Discourse and a New Sense of Value: Meaning and Purpose in the Neoclassical Economics of Alfred Marshall Ronald Schleifer 157 12 Sidney's Technology: A Critique by Technology of Literary History Alan Liu 174 13 "Le Parjure," Perhaps: Storytelling and Lying ("abrupt breaches of syntax") Jacques Derrida 195

    1 in stock

    £105.40

  • Acts of Narrative

    Stanford University Press Acts of Narrative

    Book SynopsisThis collection brings together essays that reflect on the nature of narrative, literary criticism and history from a variety of theoretical and disciplinary perspectives, ranging from deconstruction, psychoanalysis and trauma theory, to narratology, technology, economics and aesthetics.Trade Review"Acts of Narrative explores different facets of narrative with historical and thematic breadth, and each of the essays is a remarkable narrative act in its own right. Taken as a whole, the collection is a powerful demonstration of how the intersections between psychoanalysis, post-structuralism, and performative theory change our understanding of narrative and its function in cultural life." -Ewa Plonowska Ziarek,University of Notre DameTable of ContentsPreface: The Place of Narrative CarolJacobs ix 1 J. Hillis Miller and the Task of the Critic Henry Sussman 2 Lying Against Death: Out of the Loop J. Hillis Miller 15 3 Waiting in the Wings Diane Elam 31 4 Parting Words: Trauma, Silence, and Survival Cathy Caruth 47 5 The Other Day: The Interpretation of Daydreams Rachel Bowlby 62 6 Difference Behind Similarity: Focalization in Third-Person Center-of-Consciousness and First-Person Retrospective Narration Dan Shen 81 7 The "Telepathy Effect": Notes toward a Reconsideration of Narrative Fiction Nicholas Royle 93 8 Trackings Tom Cohen 110 9 The Rape of the Lock: A Jacobite Aesthetics? Ronald Paulson 130 10 The Serpent in the Wilderness: Space, Place, and Landscape in the Eighteenth Century W J. T Mitchell 146 11 Narrative Discourse and a New Sense of Value: Meaning and Purpose in the Neoclassical Economics of Alfred Marshall Ronald Schleifer 157 12 Sidney's Technology: A Critique by Technology of Literary History Alan Liu 174 13 "Le Parjure," Perhaps: Storytelling and Lying ("abrupt breaches of syntax") Jacques Derrida 195

    £26.99

  • Just Being Difficult

    Stanford University Press Just Being Difficult

    Book SynopsisIs academic writing, particularly in the disciplines of literary theory and cultural studies, needlessly obscure? The claim has been widely circulated in the media and subject to passionate debate, but it has not been the subject of serious discussion. Just Being Difficult? provides learned and thoughtful analyses of the claim, of those it targets, and of the entire question of how critical writing relates to its intended publics and to audiences beyond them. In this book, a range of distinguished scholars, including some who have been charged with willful obscurity, argue for the interest and importance of some of the procedures that critics have preferred to charge with obscurity rather than confront in another way. The debate on difficult writing hovers on the edges of all academic writing that seeks to play a role in the public arena. This collection is a much-needed contribution to the discussion.Trade Review"This collection is a remarkable and rational contribution to a passionate contemporary debate. Is academic writing unjustifiably obscure? The claim has been widely made in media ranging from the Wall Street Journal to The New Republic and Philosophy and Literature. Just Being Difficult? offers a thoughtful, generally unpolemical, stimulating, and learned series of analyses of the claim, of those its targets, and of the entire question of how critical writing relates to its intended public and the audiences beyond it." -Richard Terdiman,University of California, Santa CruzTable of ContentsIntroduction: Dressing Up, Dressing Down 1 JONATHAN CULLER AND KEVIN LAMB Part 1. In Search of a Common Language; or, Language Debates and the History of Philosophy 1. Difficult Style and "Illustrious" Vernaculars: A Historical Perspective 15 MARGARET FERGUSON 2. Hume's Learned and Conversable Worlds 29 ROBIN VALENZA AND JOHN BENDER 3. Bad Writing and Good Philosophy 43 JONATHAN CULLER 4. The Metaphysics of Clarity and the Freedom of Meaning 58 JOHN MCCUMBER Part 2. Institutions, Publics, Intellectual Labor 5. Feminism's Broken English 75 ROBYN WIEGMAN 6. The Resistance of Theory; or, The Worth of Agony 95 REY CHOW 7. Styles of Intellectual Publics 106 MICHAEL WARNER Part 3. Modernist Poetics and Critical Badness 8. On Difficulty, the Avant-Garde, and Critical Moribundity 129 PETER BROOKS 9. Difficulty in Modern Poetry and Aesthetics 139 ROBERT KAUFMAN 1O. Bad Writing 157 BARBARA JOHNSON Part 4. Address to the Other: Ethics and Acknowledgment 11. The Morality of Form; or,What's "Bad" about "BadWriting"? 171 DAVID PALUMBO-LIU 12. The Politics of the Production of Knowledge:An Interview with Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak 181 STUART J. MURRAY I3. Values of Difficulty 199 JUDITH BUTLER

    £19.79

  • Regimes of Description

    Stanford University Press Regimes of Description

    Book SynopsisRegimes of Description responds to the perception-however imprecise-that forms of knowledge in every sector of contemporary culture are being fundamentally reshaped by the digital revolution.Table of ContentsIntroduction —John Bender and Michael Marrinan Description: Fantasies of General Knowledge Description by Omission: Nature Enlightened and Obscured —Lorraine Daston Nature's Unruly Body: The Limits of Scientific Description —Londa Schiebinger Mithridates in Paradise: Describing Languages in a Universalistic World —Jürgen Trabant Between Political Arithmetic and Political Economy —Mary Poovey Describing: Imagination and Knowing Problems of Description in Art: Realism —Wolfgang Klein Imagining Flowers: Perceptual Mimesis (Particularly Delphinium) —Elaine Scarry Not Seeing the Laocoön: Lessing in the Archive of the Eighteenth Century —Wolfgang Ernst Disparities between Part and Whole in the Description of Works of Art —Alex Potts The Undescribed: Horizons of the Known Between Mechanism and Romantic Naturphilosophie: Vitalizing Nature and Naturalizing Historical Discourse in the Late Enlightenment —Peter Hanns Reill Transparency and Utopia: Constructing the Void from Pascal to Foucault —Anthony Vidler Aesthetic Media: The Structure of Aesthetic Theory before Kant —David E. Wellbery

    £22.49

  • The Ends of Mourning

    Stanford University Press The Ends of Mourning

    Book SynopsisThe Ends of Mourning explores from an interdisciplinary perspective the contemporary crisis of mourning. In an age skeptical of history and memory, we relate to the past only as a spectacle, a product to be consumed in the cultural marketplace.The book charts the emergence and development of the problem of mourning in the writings of Freud, Proust, and Freud''s successor Lacan. Freud''s idea of sorrow work and Proust''s concept of involuntary memory defined the terms of the classic modernist account of mourning in the fields of psychoanalysis and literature. Yet their insistence on the egotistical aspects of loss to the exclusion of all ethical and political considerations threatens the dissolution of the question of mourning.Trade Review"Alessia Ricciardi's The Ends of Mourning is a cogently argued and beautifully written work that deals with the fascinating and timely question of mourning. Ricciardi's book advances the existing body of work on trauma by considering the place of mourning in the transition from modernity to postmodernity. This place is, we learn, a missing place, for there is an important sense in which mourning is absent from the collective theoretical consciousness of our time; with a few exceptions, theory of the postmodern era has tended to promote a sense of the post-historical, as though we could somehow be simply free and clear of the past without ever having to mourn it. Ricciardi has set herself the task of uncovering just how mourning came to be evacuated from critical discourse in the era of late capitalism, and what the consequences of this gesture have been." -- Peter Connor Barnard College "Alessia Ricciardi's truly outstanding book makes a significant contribution to critical theory in general and to psychoanalytically informed cultural criticism in particular. In many respects, it will prove to be a landmark study... The End of Mourning is an extensive, brilliant, and brilliantly executed exposition of a complex and challenging theoretical and historical argument: that twentieth-century culture and thought has been impoverished-in spite of a fascination and indeed obsession with all things historical-by refusal to consider the implications of Freud's emphasis on mourning as a proper way of relating to the past." -- Ulrich Baer New York University

    £21.59

  • Production of Presence

    Stanford University Press Production of Presence

    Book Synopsis"Production of Presence" is a comprehensive version of the thinking of Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht. most consistently original literary It offers a personalized account of some of the central theoretical movements in literary studies and in the humanities over the past 30 years.Trade Review"...Production of Presence is focused and persuasive. [It} reflect[s] the intellectual, and physical, journey of a courageous and versatile thinker." -- Southern Humanities ReviewTable of ContentsContents User's Manual--xiii Materialities/The Nonhermeneutic/Presence: An Anecdotal Account of Epistemological Shifts--1 Metaphysics: A Brief Prehistory of What Is Now Changing--21 Beyond Meaning: Positions and Concepts in Motion--51 Epiphany/Presentification/Deixis: Futures for the Humanities and Arts--91 To Be Quiet for a Moment: About Redemption--133 Notes--155 Index--173 Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication: Aesthetics, Experience

    £74.70

  • Production of Presence

    Stanford University Press Production of Presence

    Book Synopsis"Production of Presence" is a comprehensive version of the thinking of Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht. most consistently original literary It offers a personalized account of some of the central theoretical movements in literary studies and in the humanities over the past 30 years.Trade Review"...Production of Presence is focused and persuasive. [It} reflect[s] the intellectual, and physical, journey of a courageous and versatile thinker." -- Southern Humanities ReviewTable of ContentsContents User's Manual--xiii Materialities/The Nonhermeneutic/Presence: An Anecdotal Account of Epistemological Shifts--1 Metaphysics: A Brief Prehistory of What Is Now Changing--21 Beyond Meaning: Positions and Concepts in Motion--51 Epiphany/Presentification/Deixis: Futures for the Humanities and Arts--91 To Be Quiet for a Moment: About Redemption--133 Notes--155 Index--173 Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication: Aesthetics, Experience

    £17.99

  • From Historicity to Fictionality

    Stanford University Press From Historicity to Fictionality

    Book SynopsisThis is the first comprehensive work in English on the complex history and theory of traditional Chinese narrative. It describes the major Chinese conventions and strategies for interpreting narrative works, both historical and fictional, from the earliest narratives through those of the Ch''ing dynasty. For most of China''s recorded history, historical authenticity and factual accuracy were paramount in the production and reception of narrative texts. Fictional narratives were theorized and judged in accordance with the standards of historical narratives. In short, narrative was history, and fiction was defective history. Furthermore, the state made great efforts to control fiction by suppression (censorship) and disavowal (denigration and trivialization). It was only with the widespread popularity of novels in the Ming and Ch''ing dynasties that Chinese theorists were able to come to terms with fiction and dehistoricize the poetics of narrative by allowing and recognizing inventio

    £22.49

  • Aesthetic Democracy

    Stanford University Press Aesthetic Democracy

    Book SynopsisAesthetic Democracy argues that the possibility of social and political democracy depends primarily upon art and aesthetics, and that it is art which determines the possibilities of human freedom.Trade Review"Docherty has previously published a number of distinguished books, but this one might be seen as the culmination of his years of thought and work on the humanities and their social roles... The scope of Docherty's knowledge is truly amazing... [He] writes with a quite unusual combination of passionate commitment and temperate clarity about difficult matters." -J. Hillis Miller,University of California, IrvineTable of Contents@fmct:Contents @toc4:Preface iii Introduction iii @toc1:Section One The colonial condition of criticism @toc2:Chapter 1 On prejudice and forgetting 0 Chapter 2 On urgency and emergency; or, deconstruction not reading politics 000 Chapter 3 declining the west 000 @toc1:Section Two The Potential of Aestheticism @toc2:Chapter 4 Aesthetic education and the demise of experience 000 Chapter 5 The Passion of the Possible 000 Chapter 6 Potential European Democracy 000 @toc1:Section Three: Sovereign Democracy @toc2:Chapter 7 The Ethics of Hypocrisy 000 Chapter 8 Machiavelli and modernity 000 Chapter 9 Aesthetic Democracy: the one and the many 000 @toc4:Notes 000 Index 000

    £18.99

  • The Literary in Theory

    Stanford University Press The Literary in Theory

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisHas theory neglected literature? Often literary and cultural theory, which goes by the nickname Theory, has seemed to be the theory of everything except literature: theory of language, of sexuality, of history, of the body, of the psyche, of meaning (or meaninglessness), of politics, but not theory of literature.In this timely and wide-ranging book, Jonathan Culler, whose lucid analyses of structuralism, semiotics, and deconstruction have been prized by generations of readers, explores the place of the literary in theory. If theory has sometimes neglected literature, the literary has, Culler argues, retained a crucial if misunderstood role. Culler''s account of the fortunes of the literary in theory, of the resistance to theory, and of key theoretical conceptstext, sign, interpretation, performative, and omniscienceprovides valuable insight into today''s theoretical debates; and his analysis of various disciplinary practices explores the possibilities of theory for theTrade Review"In this wide-ranging study, Jonathan Culler gives us an engaging overview of the interdependency of 'literature' and 'theory' that configures the contemporary academic scene . . . I love this book, and highly recommend it to anyone interested in the literary and theoretical landscape of contemporary academia." -- John Dolis * Comparative Literature Studies *"This difficult yet interesting book asserts that theory is not dead, that theory is literature and literature theory . . . The book is throughout provocative in these and other defences of theory, and of literature." -- Modern Language Review"The Literary in Theory takes up questions that have been basic to the enterprise known as 'theory' with a fine mix of historical awareness, lively critical sense, and thoughtful advocacy. Culler's vision of literary studies is inclusive and cumulative: it reminds us that 'learning' is both a noun and a verb, both a result and a process. Is theory dead? This book shows that it has a pulse and a sense of humor." -- Haun Saussy * Yale University *"[Jonathan Culler's] ultimate aim, as his title suggests, is to make his readers aware of the literary (i.e., the special self-reflexive, questioning, skeptical attitude and practice which seeks to understand the conditions of its own possibility) within theory or Theory, which is an interdisciplinary undertaking informed by this attitude or practice. I would recommend this book to teachers and to students of literature for its clarity, excellent analyses and exemplifications, as well as for its critical attitude, in the sense of critique, of central issues confronting the humanities today." * Walter De Gruyter *Table of Contents@fmct:Contents @toc4:Acknowledgements iii @toc2:Introduction 000 @toc1:Theory @toc2:1 The Literary in Theory 00 2 The Novel and the Nation 00 3 Resisting Theory 00 @toc1:Concepts @toc2:4 Text: Its Vicissitudes 000 5 The Sign: Saussure and Derrida on Arbitrariness 000 6 The Performative 000 7 Interpretation: In Praise of Overinterpretation 000 8 Omniscience 000 @toc1:Critical Practices @toc2:9 Bad Writing and Good Philosophy 000 10 Writing Criticism 000 11 Doing Cultural Studies 000 12 Comparative Literature, at last 000 @toc4:Index 000

    1 in stock

    £81.90

  • The Literary in Theory

    Stanford University Press The Literary in Theory

    Book SynopsisThis work explores the role of the literary in theory, with wide-ranging analysis of key concepts and disciplinary practices.Trade Review"In this wide-ranging study, Jonathan Culler gives us an engaging overview of the interdependency of 'literature' and 'theory' that configures the contemporary academic scene . . . I love this book, and highly recommend it to anyone interested in the literary and theoretical landscape of contemporary academia." -- John Dolis * Comparative Literature Studies *"This difficult yet interesting book asserts that theory is not dead, that theory is literature and literature theory . . . The book is throughout provocative in these and other defences of theory, and of literature." -- Modern Language Review"The Literary in Theory takes up questions that have been basic to the enterprise known as 'theory' with a fine mix of historical awareness, lively critical sense, and thoughtful advocacy. Culler's vision of literary studies is inclusive and cumulative: it reminds us that 'learning' is both a noun and a verb, both a result and a process. Is theory dead? This book shows that it has a pulse and a sense of humor." -- Haun Saussy * Yale University *"[Jonathan Culler's] ultimate aim, as his title suggests, is to make his readers aware of the literary (i.e., the special self-reflexive, questioning, skeptical attitude and practice which seeks to understand the conditions of its own possibility) within theory or Theory, which is an interdisciplinary undertaking informed by this attitude or practice. I would recommend this book to teachers and to students of literature for its clarity, excellent analyses and exemplifications, as well as for its critical attitude, in the sense of critique, of central issues confronting the humanities today." * Walter De Gruyter *Table of Contents@fmct:Contents @toc4:Acknowledgements iii @toc2:Introduction 000 @toc1:Theory @toc2:1 The Literary in Theory 00 2 The Novel and the Nation 00 3 Resisting Theory 00 @toc1:Concepts @toc2:4 Text: Its Vicissitudes 000 5 The Sign: Saussure and Derrida on Arbitrariness 000 6 The Performative 000 7 Interpretation: In Praise of Overinterpretation 000 8 Omniscience 000 @toc1:Critical Practices @toc2:9 Bad Writing and Good Philosophy 000 10 Writing Criticism 000 11 Doing Cultural Studies 000 12 Comparative Literature, at last 000 @toc4:Index 000

    £20.89

  • Beckett Derrida and the Event of Literature

    Stanford University Press Beckett Derrida and the Event of Literature

    Book SynopsisJacques Derrida's repeatedly stated admiration and professed inability to comment on the work of Samuel Beckett are the point of departure for this book's exploration of the relation between philosophy and literature.Trade Review"Those who live by the word have unfinished business with the achievement of Samuel Beckett. Asja Szafraniec's ambitious study, taking Derrida's elaborations as measures in turn measured by Beckett's corpus, is as clear and comprehensive and illuminating a progress with the complex of these performers as one might ask for. Near initiates of this region of crisscross between what is called philosophy and what literature, as well as experienced warriors within it, should find cause to be grateful for Asja Szafraniec's sure hand and expansive connections." —Stanley Cavell, Harvard University"This is a remarkable and valuable work in many respects, in particular because it is not only the first, to my knowledge, to systematically explore the relation between Derrida and Beckett, but also because it puts Derrida's vision of literature to the test in the context of a corpus of writings that does not belong to the canon of literature with which he has been involved." -- Rodolphe Gasché * SUNY Buffalo *"I know of no author who brings to the page such a deep understanding of Derrida's philosophy along with such a delicate, piercing awareness of the singularity of Beckett's text and its place in the literary institution." -- Peter T. Connor * Barnard College *"Szafraniec makes an important contribution to discussion on transactions and interconnections between Samuel Beckett and Jacques Derrida, two writers engaged in very different kinds of deconstructive operations That Beckett may have exposed the exhaustion of literature in order to evade the inevitable delusions that language engenders is an extraordinary thesis, which Szafraniec makes credible." -- CHOICETable of ContentsContents Acknowledgments xxx Introduction 1 1. The Question of Literature 000 2. A Singular Odyssey 000 3. Beckett, Derrida and the Ordinary 000 4. Beckett's "Exhausted" Archives 000 5. Singular Points of Transaction (I): The Subject 000 6. Singular Points of Transaction (II): "What Are Poets for?" The Authority of Literature 000 7. Singular Points of Transaction (III): "Wanting in Inanity." Negativity, Language and "God" in Beckett 000 Concluding Remarks 000 Notes 000 Bibliography 000 Index 000

    £22.79

  • Romanticism After Auschwitz

    Stanford University Press Romanticism After Auschwitz

    Book SynopsisRomanticism After Auschwitz reveals how one of the most insistently anti-romantic discourses, post-Holocaust testimony, remains romantic, and proceeds to show how this insight compels a thorough rethinking of romanticism.Trade Review"A good book about the pain of surviving." -- Marion Spies * Religion and the Arts. *"This is, moreover, a challenging and often contentious book that deserves to be viewed as a significant contribution to the question of the survival of Romanticism even where it seems to be disavowed most forcefully." -- Time Literary Supplement"At a time when studies of the field remain predominantly structured by historicist paradigms, Romanticism after Auschwitz demonstrates that romanticism cannot be bound by periodization, that it simply remains good to think with. Any reader of Guyer's sober, poignant argument that lyric figure bears witness to a survival that is neither redemptive nor privative will come away from this book both sadder and wiser." -- Stephen Goldsmith * University of California at Berkeley *"This is a bracing, brilliant book. In compelling fashion Guyer weaves back and forth between Romantic literature and culture in the aftermath of Auschwitz. She uncovers untold dynamics in texts we thought we knew—by Mary Shelley, Wordsworth, and Coleridge—and provides precise and painstaking readings of Celan, Shakespeare and Resnais' Night and Fog. Altogether, a haunting book about haunting and testimony." -- Ian Balfour * York University *Table of Contents@fmct:Contents @toc4:Acknowledgments iii @toc2:Introduction: The Rhetoric of Survival 1 1. Romanticism, Testimony, Prosopopoeia 000 2. Naked Language, Naked Life: Wordsworth's Rhetoric of Survival 000 3. Testimony and Trope in Frankenstein 000 4. Anthropomorphizing the Human 000 5. The Rhetoric of Wakefulness 000 6. Breath, Today: Celan's Translation of Shakespeare's Sonnet 71 000 7. The Remains of Figure: Nuit et Brouillard, Nacht und Nebel 000 Ending in Romanticism 000 @toc4:Notes 000 Bibliography 000 Index

    £52.70

  • Critical Excess

    Stanford University Press Critical Excess

    Book SynopsisThis lucidly written book looks at the interpretative audacity of five major "overreaders"—Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze, Emmanuel Levinas, Slavoj Žižek and Stanley Cavell—and asks what is at stake and what is to be gained by their approaches to literature and film.Trade Review"This is a book about how certain philosophers read works of literature and film, and whether literature and film become or can be shown to be themselves philosophical in virtue of this reading. But what sort of reading? The figures under study here—Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze, Emmanuel Levinas, Slavoj Žižek, and Stanley Cavell—approach ('attack' might be a better word) literature and film in ways that we lack concepts to describe, and they do not hesitate to call their ways of reading (not to mention what they read) 'philosophy.' 'Overreading' is Colin Davis's covering term for how these philosophers work on their texts, but no one of them is like any of the others, so their ways of reading are to that extent untheorizable. Instead of large concepts Davis gives us close readings of their readings of particular texts or films—this against the background of lucid and accurate accounts of their particular philosophical or theoretical orientations. This is a fine and timely piece of work, and beautifully written in the bargain." -- Gerald Bruns * University of Notre Dame *"A superb book, at once lucid and passionate, arguing the case for the wise folly of willful, outrageous, and unconventional critical thinking, thanks to which we might learn new and valuable things about the world we live in. Davis is a friendly, learned, and judicious guide, and his commitment to the ethical possibilities of adventurous critical thought is nothing short of inspirational. Read!, he exhorts us, Watch!, and Think!—who knows what you might find out?" -- Martin Crowley * Cambridge University *"Critical Excess is an important book . . . Throughout Critical Excess, Davis choose interesting texts, not always the most obvious ones, in which to explore the given critics' practice . . . Colin Davis' examination of these radically divergent critical practices has much to teach us, or remind us, about the value of and necessity for over-reading or over-interpretation." -- Clint Burnham * Electronic Book Review *"This is an admirable book. Davis writes beautifully, and his readings are models of clarity and precision. They are also narrowly focused, and this is a strength rather than a weakness. Rather than surveying entire bodies of work, Davis examines just a few texts by each thinker—often texts that are not well known. The result is a study which is wide-ranging but not superficial." -- Robert Piercey * University of Regina, Philosophy in Review *"Davis's book demonstrates, in exemplary fashion, the extent to which practices of overreading have come to constitute one of the key techniques of the philosophical thinking that has emerged in the wake of the closure or deconstruction of metaphysics . . . Davis has produced a work of highly original and important literary theory that draws on the more modest techniques and scholarly protocols of what he rather self-deprecatingly dubs the 'pedestrian critic'. Yet, in so doing, he has demonstrated the extent to which the techniques of literary criticism and scholarship can make indispensable contributions to contemporary and philosophical debate." -- Ian James * French Studies *"These readings in praise of overreading are detailed, patient, and rewarding. At its core, Davis's overreading is an openness to the uncanny potential for works of art to be familiar and strange, far removed from a hermeneutics of suspicion, feeding and feeding on art's—and criticism's—capacity for surprise. In this excess lies criticism's chance to be interesting." -- Mark Robson * Modern Language Review *

    £17.99

  • The Game of Probability

    Stanford University Press The Game of Probability

    Book SynopsisThere exist literary histories of probability and scientific histories of probability, but it has generally been thought that the two did not meet. Campe begs to differ. Mathematical probability, he argues, took over the role of the old probability of poets, orators, and logicians, albeit in scientific terms. Indeed, mathematical probability would not even have been possible without the other probability, whose roots lay in classical antiquity. The Game of Probability revisits the seventeenth and eighteenth-century probabilistic revolution, providing a history of the relations between mathematical and rhetorical techniques, between the scientific and the aesthetic. This was a revolution that overthrew the order of things, notably the way that science and art positioned themselves with respect to reality, and its participants included a wide variety of people from as many walks of life. Campe devotes chapters to them in turn. Focusing on the interpretation of games of cTrade Review"Wiggin's translation of this demanding critical text is clear and accessible."—Richard Langer, The Year's Work in English Studies"Campe's book is a recommendable and laudable cross-disciplinary enquiry into the aesthetic, theological, philosophical, literary and mathematical developments that circumscribe the notion of modern probability as a highly complex phenomenon."—Laura Søvsø Thomasen and Henrik Kragh Sørensen, British Journal for the History of Science"Readers who have studied other histories containing views of the probability of this period will find considerable, and refreshing, additional material here. For instance, Campe considers, as contributors to the probabilistic revolution, mathematicians, moral theologians, jurists, natural scientists, rhetoricians and logicians, the insurance industry, economists, and civil servants . . . [The Game of Probability] is a work that repays serious study with many illuminating moments, adding as it does not only to readers' probabilistic knowledge but also to their appreciation of the early novel. Campe sheds light on the emergence of probability as we now see it: not only its development from gaming, but also its necessary development through literature and jurisprudence. The book, exhibiting great scholarship, is not a history of probability and statistics, but nevertheless forms an important addition to works on that topic."—A. I. Dale, Mathematical Reviews"Rüdiger Campe's The Game of Probability lays out—for the first time and in all its complexity—a semantic field crucial to our modernity: to our social and juridical modernity, to our scientific and mathematical modernity, to our literary modernity. The breadth and depth of learning upon which this book rests will make it an invaluable resource for scholars across the historical-humanistic disciplines and the bright light generated by its readings will illuminate countless research projects. This marvelous book belongs among the most distinguished publications to have emerged out of cultural studies in Germany during the past thirty years."—David E. Wellbery University of Chicago

    £31.50

  • Walter Benjamin

    Stanford University Press Walter Benjamin

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"Weigel (director, Center for Literary and Cultural Research, Berlin) offers a meticulous exploration of the German writer Walter Benjamin's take on creaturely existence, law, sovereignty, secularization and holiness, language, and art."—M. V. Marder, CHOICE"Weigel's readings, which are steeped in philological detail and hermeneutic insight, brilliantly exhibit the stakes involved in approaching Benjamin's work anew. Her impeccable sense for intertextual trajectories coupled with broad erudition not only results in sophisticated exegeses, but also amply demonstrate the continued if not urgent relevance of Benjamin's interventions for our current intellectual and cultural concerns."—John T. Hamilton, Harvard University

    £22.49

  • Atmosphere Mood Stimmung

    Stanford University Press Atmosphere Mood Stimmung

    Book SynopsisThis book explores the act of reading as the experiencing of specific moods and atmospheres.Trade Review"In the first part of the book, entitled 'Moments', in a truly comparative tour de force, Gumbrecht moves insightfully and suggestively from Lazarillo de Tormes to Shakespeare's sonnets, from Diderot's Le Neveu de Rameau to Caspar David Friedrich's paintings, from Thomas Mann's Venice to Machado de Assis's Memorial de Aries, making these works apt condensations of particular 'forms of "life"' in different historical periods."—Pierpaolo Antonello, Modern Language Review"Writing in prose that is remarkably lucid for a philosophical text, the author illustrates his point with examples that range widely, from medieval verse to the picaresque narrative; from the art of Caspar David Friedrich to the music of Janis Joplin. Although the book will be most useful for specialists, less experienced readers would also benefit from engagement with Gumbrecht's heuristic for reading literature. Highly recommended."—J. F. Moffett, CHOICE"Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht is one of the 'Meisterdenker' (Master Thinkers) of our time and a teacher in the best sense of the word. The perspective on literature that he presents here—the study of the emotional reactions, moods, and atmospheres that reading can trigger—entails a serious methodological challenge. How can one avoid delivering subjective impressions without any objective relevance? His answer is as simple as it is bold, thought-provoking, and charming: You can't."—Eckart Goebel, New York University"This book, like most of Gumbrecht's previous work, will be a trendsetting example of literary criticism. It opens the way to a re-evaluation of what has been but a faint 'longing.' Monumental endeavors such as this keep alive the hard questions of which our profession has mostly lost track."—Barbara Vinken, University of Munich"A delightful read. There is a fine and subtle affinity between the form of the chapters, which might almost be called 'mood pieces,' and their delicate and somewhat elusive subject. Experts and general readers alike will derive both pleasure and profit from this book."—Eric Downing, University of North Carolina

    £18.04

  • Between Philosophy and Literature

    Stanford University Press Between Philosophy and Literature

    Book SynopsisThis book examines Bakhtin as a Modernist, "exilic" thinker, engaged with the question of ethical subjectivity, aligned with contemporary Continental philosophers such as Bergson, Merleau-Ponty, and Levinas, and positioned at a crossroads of the human sciences.Trade Review"A recurrent motif of the book, reflecting both Bakhtin's work and human experience in general, is the subject's need for a framing structure alongside the need to transcend those frames. The ethical subject pushes through the frame while understanding its deep dependence on that very frame - the individual acting at the limits of being even if those limits are impossible to fully cross. In her study, Erdinast-Vulcan has distilled the complexity of Bakhtin's thought while preserving its core of humanity - achieving that rare feat of a scholarly work that deals with questions that are pressing in human life." -- David Stromberg * Partial Answers: Journal of LIterature and the History of Ideas *"Erdinast-Vulcan provides an interpretation of Bakhtin's neglected early writings that effectively makes them available for the first time to a general audience. Her readings are critical, but they insightfully convey the essence of what Bakhtin was trying to do in his earliest phase. Her lucid exposition will result in a discovery of those writings as the important documents they are in the formation of new paths in linguistics, ethics, aesthetics—and even theology." —Michael Holquist, Yale University"By uncovering the layers of Bakhtin's understanding of the subject, Erdinast-Vulcan's offers an in-depth interpretation of his 'philosophizing under the mask' at a time when literary theory came under the threat of totalitarianism. She portrays his vision of the subject in the process of its formation, and by placing it in a broad historical context she discloses the range of his influence on modern philosophy and the humanities." -- Boris Gubman * European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms *"Daphna Erdinast-Vulcan's study avoids the standard lines of inquiry into the work of Mikhail Bakhtin. It aspires neither to provide a full exposition of his thought, nor to situate it in its cultural context or trace its intellectual genealogies. Drawing largely on sources that are less widely known—the early philosophical manuscripts and the suggestive notebooks—she provides instead a compelling account of Bakhtin's idiosyncratic place within the Western philosophical tradition, and in particular within the tradition of thinking about subjectivity and ethics....Bakhtin's work emerges as neither a curiosity from the past, fit for little more than intellectual-historical unpacking, nor a repository of helpful terms to be applied to our respective domains of study, but rather as our untimely contemporary, still grappling with the deadlock between a discredited foundationalism and an unsatisfying relativism....Lucid and beautifully written." -- Ilya Kliger * Comparative Literature *"Between Philosophy and Literature is profoundly interesting . . . [I]ts vision of a better way to live is genuinely persuasive . . . The chapters in which Bakhtin is compared to Bergson, Merleau-Ponty and Lévinas are particularly well-achieved and show how the examination of a concrete, historically situated, and creative self became a sustained philosophical concern in the 20th century." -- Andre van Loon * Review 31 *

    £89.10

  • Between Philosophy and Literature

    Stanford University Press Between Philosophy and Literature

    Book SynopsisThis book examines Bakhtin as a Modernist, "exilic" thinker, engaged with the question of ethical subjectivity, aligned with contemporary Continental philosophers such as Bergson, Merleau-Ponty, and Levinas, and positioned at a crossroads of the human sciences.Trade Review"A recurrent motif of the book, reflecting both Bakhtin's work and human experience in general, is the subject's need for a framing structure alongside the need to transcend those frames. The ethical subject pushes through the frame while understanding its deep dependence on that very frame - the individual acting at the limits of being even if those limits are impossible to fully cross. In her study, Erdinast-Vulcan has distilled the complexity of Bakhtin's thought while preserving its core of humanity - achieving that rare feat of a scholarly work that deals with questions that are pressing in human life." -- David Stromberg * Partial Answers: Journal of LIterature and the History of Ideas *"Erdinast-Vulcan provides an interpretation of Bakhtin's neglected early writings that effectively makes them available for the first time to a general audience. Her readings are critical, but they insightfully convey the essence of what Bakhtin was trying to do in his earliest phase. Her lucid exposition will result in a discovery of those writings as the important documents they are in the formation of new paths in linguistics, ethics, aesthetics—and even theology." —Michael Holquist, Yale University"By uncovering the layers of Bakhtin's understanding of the subject, Erdinast-Vulcan's offers an in-depth interpretation of his 'philosophizing under the mask' at a time when literary theory came under the threat of totalitarianism. She portrays his vision of the subject in the process of its formation, and by placing it in a broad historical context she discloses the range of his influence on modern philosophy and the humanities." -- Boris Gubman * European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms *"Daphna Erdinast-Vulcan's study avoids the standard lines of inquiry into the work of Mikhail Bakhtin. It aspires neither to provide a full exposition of his thought, nor to situate it in its cultural context or trace its intellectual genealogies. Drawing largely on sources that are less widely known—the early philosophical manuscripts and the suggestive notebooks—she provides instead a compelling account of Bakhtin's idiosyncratic place within the Western philosophical tradition, and in particular within the tradition of thinking about subjectivity and ethics....Bakhtin's work emerges as neither a curiosity from the past, fit for little more than intellectual-historical unpacking, nor a repository of helpful terms to be applied to our respective domains of study, but rather as our untimely contemporary, still grappling with the deadlock between a discredited foundationalism and an unsatisfying relativism....Lucid and beautifully written." -- Ilya Kliger * Comparative Literature *"Between Philosophy and Literature is profoundly interesting . . . [I]ts vision of a better way to live is genuinely persuasive . . . The chapters in which Bakhtin is compared to Bergson, Merleau-Ponty and Lévinas are particularly well-achieved and show how the examination of a concrete, historically situated, and creative self became a sustained philosophical concern in the 20th century." -- Andre van Loon * Review 31 *

    £22.79

  • Dead Pledges

    Stanford University Press Dead Pledges

    20 in stock

    Book SynopsisDead Pledges is the first book to explore the ways that U.S. culturefrom novels and poems to photojournalism and horror movieshas responded to the collapse of the financialized consumer credit economy in 2008. Connecting debt theory to questions of cultural form, this book argues that artists, filmmakers, and writers have re-imagined what it means to owe and to own in a period when debt is what makes our economic lives possible. Encompassing both popular entertainment and avant-garde art, the post-crisis productions examined here help to map the landscape of contemporary debt: from foreclosure to credit scoring, student debt to securitized risk, microeconomic theory to anti-eviction activism. A searing critique of the ideology of debt, Dead Pledges dismantles the discourse of moral obligation so often invoked to make us repay. Debt is no longer a source of economic credibility, it contends, but a system of dispossession that threatens the basic fabric of social life.Trade Review"In a series of nuanced yet militant readings, McClanahan makes an incisive case for the centrality of the political economy of debt to contemporary art, culture, and politics. Dead Pledges is a powerful contribution to cultural and social theory that advances the debate over capital and its representations, a debate of vital importance to economic thought, artistic practice, and political action." -- Alberto Toscano, Goldsmiths * University of London *"Dead Pledges offers an exemplary demonstration of how literary and cultural analysis can address urgent social and political problems. A timely work of critical debt theory, it is poised to reshape the transdisciplinary debates around debt and contemporary capitalism." -- Richard Dienst * Rutgers University *"McClanahan's argument is developed in part through readings of photographs of foreclosed homes and their landscapes, where in the moment of debt crisis the antisociality of (or our alienation from) property as a commodity comes to the fore. Dead Pledges brilliantly brings this antisociality home in its final chapter, which examines how housing and foreclosure have become a site of terror in contemporary horror films...McClanahan's most important contribution is how she brings out the dark side of the debt economy and crisis; that is, her attention to the hollow subjects and hostile objects that now populate our worlds. Dead Pledges illuminates the forms of structural coercion and social violence that accumulate around us, like wreckage no longer blown forward by any wind of progress." -- Brian Whitener * The New Inquiry *"McClanahan opens up the personal onto the macro of the social and the collective. In Dead Pledges, the novel and especially the realist novel turn out to be productive sites to pursue such a project due to the scalar negotiation and rich characterization that are typical of the genre—and in the credit-crisis novel both of those are under pressure" -- Arne De Boever * Boundary 2 *"McClanahan calls her cultural texts her "literary laboratories," wherein she distills and deconstructs these competing narratives about capitalism, crisis, and debt. As a work of cultural critique, Dead Pledges is uniquely capable of deconstructing the literary and aesthetic devices that structure these competing narratives in a way that political economy cannot." -- Sofia Cutler * Los Angeles Review of Books *"Dead Pledges stands out among recent criticism for its cogent description of the culture produced by our deregulated, financialized economy, which has spawned various species of hyper-usury whereby consumer credit risk and national credit ratings have themselves become tradeable objects...We need more books like this one." -- David Hawkes * Times Literary Supplement *"Dead Pledges is remarkable for its economic history, drawing on thinkers from Adam Smith, Karl Marx, and Friedrich Nietzsche, and bringing this history of economic thought to bear on the policies and arguments of Alan Greenspan, Ben Bernanke, and Robert Shiller, among others. For its historical framing of the contemporary economic crisis alone, Dead Pledges marks an important intervention into contemporary debates about cultural forms and the economy. For those working at the intersection of contemporary literature and economics it is a must-read." -- Davis Smith-Brecheisen * Mediations *"McClanahan's great strength is the wealth of detail she brings to her portrait of the period itself, with excellent distillations of existing literature on the concept of debt, its financialization prior to 2008, and the crisis itself. Her grasp of economics, in the radical as well as the more official senses, is truly masterful and she does an outstanding job of clarifying its stakes for cultural analysis." -- Julian Murphet * Affirmations: Of the Modern *"Dead Pledges is a welcome addition to an area of growing importance, the 'economic humanities.' Its author commands a disparate and complex body of economic thought and economic history." -- Jerry A. Varsava * American Studies *"The book is a masterful exploration of the cultural politics of the financial crisis and a powerful mediation on how to make sense of an era of unrepayable debts...Dead Pledgesis a must read. For whom? Well, anyone living in the 21st century, concerned about insurmountable debts, thinking of how culture and the economy transect each other, and striving for a radical politics fit for the mortgaged times in which we live."––Aparna Gopalan, New Books NetworkTable of ContentsContents and Abstracts1Behavioral Economics and the Credit-Crisis Novel chapter abstractChapter 1 analyzes novelistic representations of the 2008 credit crisis. Focusing on Jonathan Dee's The Privileges, Adam Haslett's Union Atlantic, and Martha McPhee's Dear Money, it reads the post-crisis novel's interest in individual psychology alongside and against the rise of behavioral economics. Behavioral economists understand the financial crisis as a consequence of individual choices and cultural climates: from excessive optimism and irrational exuberance to greed and overweening self-interest. At once mirroring and refuting these explanations, the post-credit-crisis novel reveals a deep ambivalence about the model of psychological complexity that undergirds both novelistic character and behavioralist economics. Exploring these problems through experiments with narrative perspective, these post-crisis novels suggest that the rich, full, autonomous homines economici of both the realist novel and microeconomic theory are bankrupt. 2Credit, Characterization, Personification chapter abstractChapter 2 addresses the relationship between debt and personhood. Practices for evaluating economic credibility in the late eighteenth century relied on subjective, qualitative, narrative forms of evaluation and thus depended on a realist model of literary character. By the early twenty-first century, however, credit scoring had become objective, quantitative, and data driven. Yet contemporary creditors still import the fictions of personhood stripped from human subjects into the scores themselves. To understand the perduring presence of the person, this chapter considers both characterization and personification. Gary Shytengart's 2010 novel Super Sad True Love Story attests to the persistence of racial discrimination in "objective" credit scoring, while conceptual art by Cassie Thornton, Occupy Wall Street debtor-portraits, and poetry by Mathew Timmons and Timothy Donnelley register debt as a material and historical force. 3Photography and Foreclosure chapter abstractChapter 3 brings together a wide range of photographs—photojournalism, art photography, and satellite images—that document the economic crisis with images of abandoned homes. These photographs reveal the effects of the boom and bust of the mortgage market on our view of the home. They also raise questions about the politics of representation, especially when the photographer's ability to enter the home depends on the power of the police to process an eviction. Photographs of empty houses, it suggests, draw on the aesthetics of what Freud termed the Unheimlich—unhomely, uncanny—to register the uncanny power of property. Turning from photographs of single houses to images of abandoned industrial landscapes and empty housing developments, this chapter argues that such images foreshadow a financial crisis to come. 4Houses of Horror chapter abstractChapter 4 begins by noting that contemporary discourse on the economic crisis is profoundly shaped by the language of horror and fear. To understand why, this chapter turns to four post-crisis horror films that explicitly link fear, foreclosure, and financialized credit: Drag Me to Hell (dir. Sam Raimi), Dream Home (dir. Pang Ho-cheung), Mother's Day (dir. Darren Lynn Bousman), and Crawlspace (dir. Josh Stolberg). All four films take up real estate lending, mortgage speculation, and foreclosure risk and locate horror in the "dead pledge" of the mortgage. Using horror and the home-invasion genre to explore the shifting understandings of ownership consequent to the housing crisis, these films frighteningly literalize the doctrine of caveat emptor. Exploring the relationship between "paying back" and "payback," they suggest that introduction of speculative risk has shifted the social force of credit contracts from the promise of trust to the threat of revenge. Coda: The Living Indebted (on Students and Sabotage) chapter abstractThe Coda to Dead Pledges explores an emerging anti-debt politics, arguing that "debt strikes" and the occupation or sabotage of domestic space are forms of protest that attempt to block capital at the point of circulation. Exploring the economics of student debt and taking up the treatment of education debt as an "investment in the future," this chapter suggests that the politics of student debt illuminate the relationship between workers and students and between the university and capitalism. It concludes by exploring the emergence of what it terms "crisis subjectivity": a demystified condition of radical percipience and canny knowing.

    20 in stock

    £77.35

  • Postregional Fictions Barry Hannah and the

    LSU Press Postregional Fictions Barry Hannah and the

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisDrawing from recent debates about the validity of regional studies and scepticism surrounding the efficacy of the concept of authenticity, Clare Chadd's Postregional Fictions focuses on questions of southern regional authenticity in fiction published by Barry Hannah from 1972 to 2001.

    1 in stock

    £36.51

  • Desire and Infinity in W. S. Merwins Poetry

    LSU Press Desire and Infinity in W. S. Merwins Poetry

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn the first monograph on W.S. Merwin to appear since his death in 2019, Feng Dong focuses on the dialectical movement of desire and infinity that ensouls the poet's entire oeuvre. His analysis foregrounds what Merwin calls ""the other side of despair"", the opposite of humans' articulated personal and social agonies.

    1 in stock

    £35.06

  • Faulkner and the Politics of Reading

    Louisiana State University Press Faulkner and the Politics of Reading

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWith this study Karl F. Zender offers fresh readings of individual novels, themes, and motifs while also assessing the impact of recent politicized interpretations on our understanding of William Faulkner’s achievement.

    1 in stock

    £20.85

  • Future Crossings Literature Between Philosophy

    Northwestern University Press Future Crossings Literature Between Philosophy

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA collection of essays exploring the future of literary studies by focusing on the relationship between literary theory, philosophy, and cultural studies. The essays aim to break the boundaries separating philosophy and literature.

    1 in stock

    £27.96

  • Northwestern University Press Bakhtin and the Classics Rethinking Theory

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    £23.96

  • Nabokovs Canon From Onegin to Ada Studies in

    Northwestern University Press Nabokovs Canon From Onegin to Ada Studies in

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisNabokov's translation of Pushkin's Eugene Onegin (1964) and its accompanying Commentary, along with Ada, or Ardor (1969), his densely allusive late Englishlanguage novel, have appeared nearly inscrutable to many interpreters of his work. If not outright failures, they are often considered relatively unsuccessful curiosities. In Bozovic's insightful study, these key texts reveal Nabokov's ambitions to reimagine a canon of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Western masterpieces with Russian literature as a central, rather than marginal, strain. Nabokov's scholarly work, translations, and lectures on literature bear resemblance to New Critical canon reformations; however, Nabokov's canon is pointedly translingual and transnational and serves to legitimize his own literary practice. The new angles and theoretical framework offered by Nabokov's Canon help us to understand why Nabokov's provocative monuments remain powerful source texts for several generations of diverse international writers

    1 in stock

    £29.96

  • Space as Storyteller Spatial Jumps in

    Northwestern University Press Space as Storyteller Spatial Jumps in

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisExplores stories across a wide range of time that narrate spatial jumps, from Walter Benjamin's tangential take on the cityscape, the experimentalism of Futurist theatricality, the multiple and potential atlases narrated by Italo Calvino and Georges Perec, and the posturban thought and practice of Bernard Tschumi and Rem Koolhaas/OMA.

    1 in stock

    £27.96

  • Northwestern University Press Speculative Formalism Literature Theory and the Critical Present Diaeresis

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    £27.96

  • New Digital Worlds

    Northwestern University Press New Digital Worlds

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTraces the formation of postcolonial studies and digital humanities as fields, identifying how they can intervene in knowledge production in the digital age. Roopika Risam examines the role of colonial violence in the development of digital archives and the possibilities of postcolonial digital archives for resisting this violence.

    1 in stock

    £27.96

  • The Origins of Russian Literary Theory

    Northwestern University Press The Origins of Russian Literary Theory

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisReconstructs lost Formalist theories of authorship, of the psychology of narrative structure, and of the social spread of poetic innovations. By recontextualising Russian Formalism within this philological paradigm, the book highlights the aspects of Formalism's legacy that speak to the priorities of twenty-first-century literary studies.Trade Review“Merrill's book is a major reinterpretation of the early stages of literary theory in Russia and their wider impact. Her narrative is attentive to detail, while remaining sure-footed when capturing the bigger picture. A rewarding piece of research that makes a strong contribution to the field.” —Galin Tihanov, author of The Birth and Death of Literary Theory: Regimes of Relevance in Russia and Beyond“With impressive erudition and admirable lucidity, Jessica Merrill offers a strikingly novel reconstruction of Russian Formalism, placing it in a rich and largely neglected historical context. Her extended discussions of folklore and folkloristics, of the emphasis on the spoken as well as the written word, of the relevance of psychological theories and of contemporary politics, force us to reconsider the movement, its achievements, and its legacy. The book is a major contribution to the study of Western literary theory, and more generally, to twentieth-century intellectual history.” —Michael Wachtel, author of The Cambridge Introduction to Russian Poetry“The Origins of Russian Literary Theory is remarkable for the lucidity of its composition. This clear and wide-ranging book makes an original and significant contribution to the study of Russian Formalism and Czech Structuralism, and thereby also to our understanding of the history of literary theory in the twentieth century—and perhaps its future in the twenty-first.” —Ilya Kliger, author of The Narrative Shape of Truth: Veridiction in Modern European Literature“Merrill’s book attests to the inspiring vitality of Russian Formalism for contemporary literary studies. It approaches this subject from a new and insightful perspective and provides provocative vistas on this seminal school of criticism.” —Peter Steiner, author of Russian Formalism: A Metapoetics“The Origins of Russian Literary Theory focuses on the role of comparative philology in the formation of Formalist concepts. The author efficiently considers both branches of the Formalist School—OPOIAZ and the Moscow Linguistic Circle—and explores why they favored folklore studies and sociolinguistic disciplines, such as dialectology (a fact largely disregarded in previous scholarship). As it is quite a departure from the traditional narrow view of Russian Formalism, Merrill’s book is a fascinating read for both literary theorists and intellectual historians.” —Igor Pilshchikov, coeditor of Epokha “ostraneniia” (The Age of “Estrangement”: Russian Formalism and Contemporary Humanities)Table of Contents Acknowledgements Note on the Text Introduction: The Philological Paradigm 1.Comparative Philology 2.The Author as Performer 3.The Psychology of Poetic Form 4.Inside the Moscow Linguistic Circle: Poetic Dialectology 5.Structuralisms Conclusion: Formalism and Philology in the Twenty-First Century Appendix Notes Bibliography Index

    1 in stock

    £29.96

  • Reading at the Limits of Poetic Form

    Northwestern University Press Reading at the Limits of Poetic Form

    Book SynopsisHow does literary objecthood contend with the challenge of writing objects that emerge at an extreme limit of material presence? Jacob McGuinn delves into the ways literature writes this indeterminate presence in the context of pre- and post-'68 Paris, a vital moment in the history of criticism.

    £28.76

  • The Wound of the Name

    Northwestern University Press The Wound of the Name

    2 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    2 in stock

    £22.79

  • A Rationale of Textual Criticism

    University of Pennsylvania Press A Rationale of Textual Criticism

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA philosophic grounding for textual criticism that shows how textual criticism is an integral part of the activity of reading.Trade ReviewNo one writes more knowledgeably or brilliantly about textual criticism than Tanselle. * Washington Post *Of course, nobody with any previous interest in the subject needs to hear encouraging praise about the author or the quality of the Rosenbach Lecture Series. * American Literature *A strangely evocative, even a moving book, a rara avis in textual circles. . . . A calm, beautifully articulated peroration that should be required reading for all critics, literary or textual. . . . Tansell's Rationale is one further demonstration of the attempts to 'step outside,' for in its call to all the citizens of the great republic of arts and letters it allows us to overcome the narrow prejudices which we may have inherited and to put our scholarship and our criticism at the service of human communication in all its manifestations. This is the final polemic of the book, and it is an heroic one indeed. That it has succeeded so well, not least in its artfully modulated language, is a tribute to the comprehensiveness and liberality of the mind of its author. * Review *These short, lucid, well-written, humane lectures are essential reading for graduate and undergraduate students concerned with texts of any kind requiring critical attention-and for their teachers. * Review of English Studies *

    1 in stock

    £15.19

  • Literary Criticism

    University of Pennsylvania Press Literary Criticism

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisAs the study of literature has extended to cultural contexts, critics have developed a language all their own. Yet, argues Mark Bauerlein, scholars of literature today are so unskilled in pertinent sociohistorical methods that they compensate by adopting cliches and catchphrases that serve as substitutes for information and logic. Thus by labeling a set of ideas an ideology they avoid specifying those ideas, or by saying that someone essentializes a concept they convey the air of decisive refutation. As long as a paper is generously sprinkled with the right words, clarification is deemed superfluous. Bauerlein contends that such usages only serve to signal political commitments, prove membership in subgroups, or appeal to editors and tenure committees, and that current textual practices are inadequate to the study of culture and politics they presume to undertake. His book discusses 23 commonly encountered terms-from deconstruction and gender to problematize and rethink-and offers a Trade Review"There isn't another book like this: a primer and a polemic on the jargon of literary study, impressive in its range of examples and uncompromising in its critique. Bauerlein describes the motives of several prospering forms of contemporary obscurantism, analyzes the conditions in which they arose, and maps the terrain in which they continue to flourish. His account is written with nerve, wit, and a tough-minded intelligence." * David Bromwich, Yale University *"A thesis I both understand and endorse. . . . I agree with him when he writes that the critical terms currently fashionable have very little to do with literature." * Philip Thody, Journal of European Studies *"This slim volume with its seemingly innocuous title takes the buzz words of contemporary critical theory to task for their pseudostatus as methodological tools…The items under the knife-cultural studies, discourse, gender theory, to pluck out a few-highlight how little real cutting edge there is in current literary criticism." * Forum for Modern Language Studies *"A shrewd demonstration, amusing and saddening at once, of what has gone wrong with so much academic writing in the field that used to be literature. It is in its way a pointed and revealing piece of cultural criticism, but of the sort which that fashionable pursuit cannot-and for reasons Bauerlein's excellent little book implies-perform." * John Hollander, Yale University *

    1 in stock

    £21.59

  • University of Pennsylvania Press Early Modern Visual Culture Representation Race

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisA collection of 10 original essays that explore the social context in which paintings, statues, textiles, maps, and other artifacts were produced and consumed in Renaissance England.Trade Review"As a picture of what currently might be most profitably studied in the visual culture of early modern England, and of how to conduct scholarship in the field, the volume is exemplary. . . . [It] treats a culture for which there is considerable scholarly interest, but from angles which have been woefully ignored up until now." * Joseph Koerner, Harvard University *Table of ContentsIntroduction —Clark Hulse and Peter Erickson 1. Imaginary Conquests: European Material Technologies and the Colonial Mirror Stage —Steven Mullaney 2. Mapping the Global Body —Valerie Traub 3. Second-World Prosthetics: Supplying Deficiencies of Nature in Renaissance Italy —Harry Berger, Jr. 4. Reading Painting: Holbein, Cromwell, Wyatt —Clark Hulse 5. Art for the Sake of Dynasty: The Black Emperor in the Drake Jewel and Elizabethan Imperial Imagery —Karen C. C. Dalton 6. Staging Women's Relations to Textiles in Shakespeare's Othello and Cymbeline —Susan Frye 7. Idols of the Gallery: Becoming a Connoisseur in Renaissance England —Stephen Orgel 8. Madagascar on My Mind: The Earl of Arundel and the Arts of Colonization —Ernest B. Gilman 9. "God for Harry, England, and Saint George": British National Identity and the Emergence of White Self-Fashioning —Peter Erickson 10. Object into Object? Some Thoughts on the Presence of Black Women in Early Modern Europe —Kim F. Hall Epilogue —Peter Erickson Contributors: Harry Berger Jr. (University of California, Santa Cruz) has recently published three books: Revisionary Play: Studies in the Spenserian Dynamic, Imaginary Audition: Shakespeare on Stage and Page, and Making Trifles of Terrors: Redistributing Complicities in Shakespeare. His new book is Fictions of the Pose: Rembrandt Against the Italian Renaissance. Karen C. C. Dalton (Harvard University) is coauthor of Winslow Homer's Images of Blacks: The Civil War and Reconstruction Years and editor of the final three volumes of The Image of the Black in Western Art, covering the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries. Peter Erickson (Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute) is author of Patriarchal Structures in Shakespeare's Drama and Rewriting Shakespeare, Rewriting Ourselves, and coeditor of Shakespeare's "Rough Magic": Renaissance Essays in Honor of C. L. Barber. Susan Frye (University of Wyoming) has written Elizabeth I: The Competition for Representation and coedited Maids and Mistresses, Cousins and Queens: Women's Alliances in Early Modern England. Ernest B. Gilman (New York University) is author of Iconoclasm and Poetry in the English Reformation: Down Went Dagon and The Curious Perspective: Literary and Pictorial Wit in the Seventeenth Century. Kim F. Hall (Georgetown University) has written Things of Darkness: Economies of Race and Gender in Early Modern England as well as essays on teaching the subject of race in Shakespeare's plays. Clark Hulse (University of Illinois at Chicago), is author of The Rule of Art: Literature and Painting in the Renaissance and Metamorphic Verse: The Elizabethan Minor Epic. He is currently working on a study of Holbein and the age of Henry VIII. Steven Mullaney (University of Michigan) has written The Place of the Stage: License, Play, and Power in Renaissance England. He is at work on two books, Mourning and Misogyny: Reformation of Affect and Ideology in Shakespeare's England, and Emotions and Its Discontents. Stephen Orgel (Stanford University) has recently published Impersonations: The Performance of Gender in Shakespeare's England and Oxford editions of The Tempest and The Winter's Tale. Valerie Traub (University of Michigan) is author of Desire and Anxiety: Circulations of Sexuality in Shakspearean Drama and coeditor of Feminist Readings of Early Modern Culture: Emerging Subjects.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • University of Pennsylvania Press Homo Narrans The Poetics and Anthropology of

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisHomo Narrans explores how human beings shape their world through the stories they tell. Author John D. Niles ponders the nature of the storytelling impulse, the social function of narrative, and the role of individual talent in oral tradition.Trade Review"Linking the performed word of the present with the textual record of the past, Homo Narrans brings together, in mutually productive ways, what have often been contrasted-folklore and literature. This readable and accessible exploration suggests that narrative and narrating are essential ways humanity fashions and refashions itself." * Mary Ellen Brown, Indiana University *"A well-documented and unusually readable and sensible synthesis of much of the work that has been done on oral culture." * MLR *"A welcome interweaving of areas too often and too simplistically segregated: folklore and literature, oral tradition and written tradition, performance and text." * Choice *

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • MP-FLO Uni Press of Florida Hemingway and Italy

    1 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    1 in stock

    £56.95

  • Transforming Contagion  Risky Contacts among

    Rutgers University Press Transforming Contagion Risky Contacts among

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisMoving from viruses, vaccines, and copycat murder to gay panics, xenophobia, and psychopaths, Transforming Contagion energetically fuses critical humanities and social science perspectives into a boundary-smashing interdisciplinary collection on contagion.Trade Review“This is an extraordinary book that radically rethinks and expands our understanding of contagion. Crossing historical, geographical and disciplinary boundaries, Transforming Contagion brings a feminist, queer and new materialist perspective that insists on the possibilities as well as the risks and anxieties of contagion.” -- Rosalind Gill * author of New Femininities: Postfeminism, Neoliberalism and Subjectivity *“Traversing the humanities and social sciences, the essays in Transforming Contagion offer a fertile prism for exploring how contagion--the spread of beliefs, emotions, texts, practices, people, and pathogens across communities and culture--has been represented, experienced, addressed, and theorized across disciplines and historical periods. This volume establishes contagion as a central keyword for studying not only biomedical but also cultural, psychological, and political forms of connection, communication, and collective action.” -- David Zimmerman * author of Panic!: Markets,Crises, and Crowds in American Fiction *"Chronicle of Higher Education 'New Scholarly Books' Weekly Book List, August 31, 2018," compiled by Nina C. Ayoub * Chronicle of Higher Education *"This edited collection of essays examines the forms, meanings, and processes of contagion across modes and sites of transmission, historical periods, and methods of scholarly analysis. This broadly referenced text is an excellent example of scholarship in the critical humanities and social science disciplines. Highly recommended." * Choice *Table of ContentsContents Introduction: Contagion as Unruly SubjectBreanne Fahs, Annika Mann, Eric Swank, and Sarah Stage Part I – Quarantine/Exposure “A Proper Contagion”: The Inoculation Narrative and the Immunological TurnC.C WharramBefore the Cell, There Was Virus: Rethinking the Concept of Parasite and Contagion Through Contemporary Research in Evolutionary VirologyAnnu DahiyaSocial (Ir)Responsibility: Vaccine Exemption and the Ethics of ImmunityRachel Conrad Bracken “Radiophobia” and the Politics of Social ContagionMajia Nadesan Part II – Flesh/Spirit Isn’t Contagion Just a Metaphor?Reading Contagion in Daniel Defoe’s Journal of the Plague Year Annika MannContagious Accumulation and Racial Capitalism in Late Nineteenth Century American FictionJustin Rogers - CooperPerformance and the Contagious Swirl of Dramatic Tradition: Performative Revision and SubversionPatrick Maley Part III – Madness/Reason Viral Murder: Contagious Killings and Epidemic BeliefsMarlene TrompAm I a Psychopath?Sadie MohlerCult of the Penis: Male Fragility and Phallic FrenzyMichelle Ashley Gohr Part IV – Revolution/Bureaucracy Fear of the Diseased Immigrant: Contagion, Xenophobia, and BelongingLouis MendozaProphylactic Policing and the Epidemiology of Dissent in the Soviet-Era Baltic StatesEdward CohnSexual Politics and Contagious Social MovementsEric SwankWords on Fire: Radical Pedagogies of the Feminist ManifestoBreanne Fahs Index Acknowledgments About the Contributors

    1 in stock

    £29.70

  • MP-VIR Uni of Virginia Mapping the Ethical Turn A Reader in Ethics

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisDivided into four sections, this collection of essays traces the interpretive, pedagogic and theoretical concerns inherent in the study of literature, ethics and modes of criticism. The book is a cohesive introduction to a reading paradigm that continues to affect the ways we think and feel.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Unsettling Nature  Ecology Phenomenology and the

    MP-VIR Uni of Virginia Unsettling Nature Ecology Phenomenology and the

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisNowhere has a longing for home flourished more than in contemporary environmental thinking, and particularly in eco-phenomenology. Unsettling Nature opens with a meditation on the trouble with such ecological homecoming narratives, which bear a close resemblance to narratives of settler colonial homemaking.Trade ReviewThoughtful, deeply researched, balanced, and substantive. Eggan’s analysis of the settler colonialist myths of home develops into a profoundly consequential critique of Western humanist culture and European colonial history that should reorient our thinking about our place among other creatures on a threatened planet. The most impressive book of ecocriticism I have read in many years." - Louise Westling, University of Oregon, author of The Logos of the Living World: Merleau-Ponty, Animals, and Language

    1 in stock

    £28.86

  • Wayne State University Press Walter Benjamin An Intellectual Biography Kritik German Literary Theory and Cultural Studies Series

    1 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    1 in stock

    £19.16

  • Three Satires Nilakantha Kshemendra and Bhallata

    New York University Press Three Satires Nilakantha Kshemendra and Bhallata

    Book SynopsisThe Dark Age Ridiculed, by Nílakantha, Beguiling Artistry, by Ksheméndra, The Hundred Allegories, by BhállataWritten over a period of nearly a thousand years, these works show three very different approaches to satire. Nílakantha gets straight to the point: swindlers prey on stupidity.The artistry that beguiles Ksheméndra is as varied as human nature and just as fallible. We are off to a gentle start Sanctimonious?really no more than a warm-up among vicesbut soon graduate to Greed and Lust. From there it''s downhill all the way, as unfaithfulness leads on to fraud, and drunkenness to depravity; deception and quackery bring up the rear. What''s this at the very end? Virtue? A late arrival, pale and unconvincing.This volume presents three Indian satirists with three different strategies: in the ninth century C.E., Bhállata sought vengeance on his boorish new king by producing vicious sarcastic verse, The Hundred Allegories; in the eleventh century, Ksheméndra presents himself as a social reformer out to shame the complacent into compliance with Vedic morality; and in the seventeenth century little can redeem the fallen characters Nílakantha portrays, so his duty is simply to warn about the corruption of every social type.Co-published by New York University Press and the JJC FoundationFor more on this title and other titles in the Clay Sanskrit series, please visit http://www.claysanskritlibrary.orgTrade Review"The books line up on my shelf like bright Bodhisattvas ready to take tough questions or keep quiet company. They stake out a vast territory, with works from two millennia in multiple genres: aphorism, lyric, epic, theater, and romance." -- Willis G. Regier * The Chronicle Review *"Very few collections of Sanskrit deep enough for research are housed anywhere in North America. Now, twenty-five hundred years after the death of Shakyamuni Buddha, the ambitious Clay Sanskrit Library may remedy this state of affairs." * Tricycle *"No effort has been spared to make these little volumes as attractive as possible to readers: the paper is of high quality, the typesetting immaculate. The founders of the series are John and Jennifer Clay, and Sanskritists can only thank them for an initiative intended to make the classics of an ancient Indian language accessible to a modern international audience." * The Times Higher Education Supplement *"The Clay Sanskrit Library represents one of the most admirable publishing projects now afoot. . . . Anyone who loves the look and feel and heft of books will delight in these elegant little volumes." * New Criterion *"Published in the geek-chic format." * BookForum *

    £18.89

  • Flann OBrien Bakhtin and Menippean Satire

    John Wiley & Sons Flann OBrien Bakhtin and Menippean Satire

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis work applies Mikhail Bakhtin's theory of literary discourse and the concept of ""carnivalisation"" to the work of Flann O'Brien. The author emphasises the political and social implications of the writings, arguing that O'Brien maintained a reflexive focus on language throughout his career.

    1 in stock

    £30.56

  • The University of Arizona Press Writing the Goodlife Mexican American Literature and the Environment

    1 in stock

    a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.

    1 in stock

    £26.36

  • Aesthetic Experience and Literary Hermeneutics

    University of Minnesota Press Aesthetic Experience and Literary Hermeneutics

    Book Synopsis

    £19.79

  • Blindness and Insight

    University of Minnesota Press Blindness and Insight

    Book SynopsisFirst published in 1983. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

    £19.79

  • The Heretical Archive

    University of Minnesota Press The Heretical Archive

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"Inspired by other scholars who have brought the phenomenological method to cinema, Domietta Torlasco writes beautifully of her own encounters with films and images, drawing the reader into her own vision as she elucidates its implication in a constellation of deep thought. The book’s insights are as fresh and profound as its writing, in other words: at its best moments, it is a real tour de force that is an extended reflection rather than a series of discrete observations." —Amy Villarejo, author of Film Studies: The Basics "Digital technology allows once quiescent cinemagoers to dismantle and refashion previously inviolable products of the film industry. Torlasco sees the potential for politically transformative thinking in such acts. She argues that our capacity to imagine alternative futures may depend on our ability to reconfigure the virtual archive of filmic memory. Part philosophical reflection, part manifesto, Torlasco's book is essential reading for anyone wishing to steer a critical theory of audiovisual art between the Scylla and Charybdis of technophilia and artworldspeak. " —Victor Burgin, author of The Remembered FilmTable of ContentsContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Against House Arrest: Antigone and the Impurity of the Death Drive2. Digital Impressions: Writing Memory after Agnès Varda3. Folding Time: Toward a New Theory of Montage4. Archiving Disappearance: From Michelangelo Antonioni to New MediaNotesIndex

    1 in stock

    £17.99

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