Why Does Literature Matter?

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Cornell University Press, 2018 M07 5 - 288 páginas

"Literature matters because... it allows for experiences important to the living out of a sophisticated and satisfying human life; because other arenas of culture cannot provide them to the same degree; and because a relatively small number of texts carry out these functions in so exceptional a manner that we owe it to past and future members of the species to keep such texts alive in our cultural traditions."—from Chapter One

Frank B. Farrell defends a rich conception of the space of literature that retains its links to issues of self-formation and metaphysics and does not let that space collapse into just another reflection of social space. He maintains that recent literary theory has badly misread findings in the philosophy of language and the theory of subjectivity. That misreading, Farrell says, has tended to endorse ways of understanding literature that make one question why it matters at all. Farrell here opposes some recent theoretical trends and, through a mix of philosophical and literary studies, tells us why in his view literature does truly matter.

Among the writers Farrell discusses are John Ashbery, Samuel Beckett, Amit Chaudhuri, Cormac McCarthy, James Merrill, Marcel Proust, Thomas Pynchon, Salman Rushdie, W. G. Sebald, and John Updike. The philosophers important to his arguments include Donald Davidson, Daniel Dennett, and Bernard Williams; G. W. F. Hegel, Martin Heidegger, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Ludwig Wittgenstein play roles as well. Among the literary theorists addressed are Stephen Greenblatt, Paul de Man, and Marjorie Perloff. In addition to his close readings of literary, philosophical, and critical texts, Farrell considers cultural studies and postcolonial studies more generally and speculates on the possible contributions of object-relations theory in psychology to the study of literature.

 

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Contenido

1 The Space of Literature
1
2 Literary Space in McCarthy and Pynchon Rushdie and Chaudhuri
25
3 The Philosophical Background
48
4 James Merrill and the Making of Literature
67
5 The Radical Linguistic Turn in de Man and Perloff
86
6 John Ashbery and Samuel Beckett
100
7 New Historicism and Cultural Studies
129
8 Literature and Regression Benjamin Derrida
156
9 Literary Style and Transitional Space
187
10 John Updike and the Scene of Literature
217
Notes
243
Bibliography
255
Index
263
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Frank B. Farrell is Professor of Philosophy at Purchase College, State University of New York. He is the author of Subjectivity, Realism, and Postmodernism: The Recovery of the World.

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