Description

Book Synopsis

Terrorism has long been a popular subject for American fiction writers. This book argues that terrorism in 1990s novels by Paul Auster, Philip Roth, and Bret Easton Ellis serves as a key trope to interrogate the limits of writing and the power of literature. Based on the complex literary and philosophical thought of Maurice Blanchot, this study deals with the writer’s terrorist temptation, language’s investment in violence, and literature’s negotiation of radical alterity. Auster’s, Roth’s, and Ellis’s novels elucidate contemporary political and economic developments as well as our cultural fear of, and fascination with, terrorism. The writing of terrorism can thus become the foundation of a different politics where, according to Maurice Blanchot, «there is no explosion except a book.»



Trade Review
«In enlisting Blanchot’s thinking in order to understand better the relation between literature and violence, Christian Kloeckner does not aim, however, to examine the thematic treatment of terrorism in selected novels as such, but rather ‘to analyse [them] for the ways in which they relate terrorism to the act of writing and the question of literature’s power’ (p. 19). To this end, he offers an often astute, well-informed analysis of Auster’s early prose and poetry, and tracks with illuminating persistence the trace left on Auster by his encounter with Blanchot.»
(Leslie Hill, French Studies Volume 72, Issue 1 2018)

Table of Contents

Terrorism in postmodern and neorealist American fiction – Maurice Blanchot – Paul Auster’s debt to Blanchot – Aesthetics of rupture and transgression – Relationship of writing, terror, freedom, and death – Power of literature – Alterity – Emmanuel Levinas – The sublime – Terrorism as spectacle in global consumer culture

The Writing of Terrorism: Contemporary American

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    A Hardback by Christian Klöckner

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 22/12/2016
      ISBN13: 9783631714102, 978-3631714102
      ISBN10: 3631714106

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Terrorism has long been a popular subject for American fiction writers. This book argues that terrorism in 1990s novels by Paul Auster, Philip Roth, and Bret Easton Ellis serves as a key trope to interrogate the limits of writing and the power of literature. Based on the complex literary and philosophical thought of Maurice Blanchot, this study deals with the writer’s terrorist temptation, language’s investment in violence, and literature’s negotiation of radical alterity. Auster’s, Roth’s, and Ellis’s novels elucidate contemporary political and economic developments as well as our cultural fear of, and fascination with, terrorism. The writing of terrorism can thus become the foundation of a different politics where, according to Maurice Blanchot, «there is no explosion except a book.»



      Trade Review
      «In enlisting Blanchot’s thinking in order to understand better the relation between literature and violence, Christian Kloeckner does not aim, however, to examine the thematic treatment of terrorism in selected novels as such, but rather ‘to analyse [them] for the ways in which they relate terrorism to the act of writing and the question of literature’s power’ (p. 19). To this end, he offers an often astute, well-informed analysis of Auster’s early prose and poetry, and tracks with illuminating persistence the trace left on Auster by his encounter with Blanchot.»
      (Leslie Hill, French Studies Volume 72, Issue 1 2018)

      Table of Contents

      Terrorism in postmodern and neorealist American fiction – Maurice Blanchot – Paul Auster’s debt to Blanchot – Aesthetics of rupture and transgression – Relationship of writing, terror, freedom, and death – Power of literature – Alterity – Emmanuel Levinas – The sublime – Terrorism as spectacle in global consumer culture

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