The Question of Literature: The Place of the Literary in Contemporary TheoryElizabeth Beaumont Bissell As literary theory has grown more influential, interdisciplinary and sophisticated, it has come to concern itself with a much greater range of issues and objects than those traditionally considered literary. It now addresses philosophy, history, psychology, politics and the media. Addressing a central and fundamental, but relatively neglected, issue in literary theory, this title seeks to recontextualise how theory has changed our understanding of literature and its questions by relating literature to the institution of the university, to ethical judgements and values, new media and computer technology and the nature of representative democracy. |
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Contents
Introduction Elizabeth Beaumont Bissell | 1 |
difference as definition Charles Altieri | 19 |
literature invention and performance Derek Attridge | 48 |
Sartre Camus and the questions of literature David Carroll | 66 |
Literary force institutional values Timothy Clark | 91 |
The literary as activity in postmodernity Marianne DeKoven | 105 |
The question concerning literature Thomas Docherty | 126 |
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aesthetic argue Attridge become Blanchot Burroughs Burroughs's Butler Camus canon claims concept creative crisis cultural studies cut-up/fold-in death drive death instincts defined democracy Derek Attridge Derrida différance discipline discourse distance distinction Eagleton emotions erary erature essay ethical criticism event example existence fact fiction force freedom Freud Fugitive Pieces function human hypertext Ibid ical ideology imagination institution invention Jacques Derrida judgement kind language linguistic liter literary experience literary studies literary texts literary theory literature's Mal Waldron means metafiction modern modes moral Naked Lunch narrative norms notion Nova Express novel Nussbaum object obsession Oedipa Peggy Kamuf perhaps philosophy pleasure pleasure principle poem poetic poetry political possible postmodern practice precisely principle production prose psyche question of literature reader reading relation repetition represent rhetorical Sartre Sartre's sense simply singularity social specific textual tion trans voice words writing