Conditions of Comparison: Reflections on Comparative Intercultural Inquiry
Autor Dr. Ming Xieen Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 oct 2011
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780826445186
ISBN-10: 0826445187
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 150 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0826445187
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 150 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Discusses comparativity, hermeneutics, episteme and paradigm, cultural difference, relativism, universalism, and occidentalism.
Notă biografică
Ming Xie is Associate Professor of English at the University of Toronto, Canada. He is the author of Ezra Pound and the Appropriation of Chinese Poetry (Routledge, 1999).
Cuprins
AcknowledgmentsIntroductionChapter 1: Multiple DefinitionChapter 2: From Comparison to ComparativityChapter 3: Hermeneutic DistanciationChapter 4: From Episteme to Paradigm and BackChapter 5: Splitting the DifferenceChapter 6: The Relativity of RelativismsChapter 7: Universalisms East and WestChapter 8: Occidentalizing ModernityEpilogueWorks CitedNotes
Recenzii
"Conditions of Comparison offers a meticulous genealogy and timely recapitulation of key critical concepts, reading protocols, and analytical instruments that constitute the discipline of comparative literature and culture. Ming Xie ably demonstrates the potential of this disciplinary formation for what he terms comparative intercultural inquiry as interpretive practice and ethical intervention among diverse cultures, their historical imbrications, and contrapuntal engagements. An exemplary study that illustrates the self-reflexive practices whose history it eloquently narrates."- Djelal Kadir, Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Comparative Literature, Penn State University, USA and author of Memos from the Besieged City: Lifelines for Cultural Sustainability (Stanford University Press, 2010)
"This is a book we've been awaiting for a long time. Moving beyond established critiques of conventional models of comparative study, Ming Xie provides a rigorous analysis of the conceptual foundations and methodological challenges of intercultural inquiry. His dissections of the critical categories underpinning current work on translation, world literature, post-colonial theory, and East/West studies-categories such as universalism, pluralism, orientalism, essentialism, incommensurability, and difference-are virtuoso performances: richly nuanced, philosophically grounded, and tremendously productive. Compelling both in its elaboration of the stakes and epistemological conditions of comparative practice and in its gestures towards a new meta-critical framework for global studies marked by flexibility, contingency, and reflexivity, this book will prove an essential touchstone for the theory and practice of comparative scholarship in the humanities." -- David Porter, Professor and Associate Chair of English, University of Michigan, USA, and author of The Chinese Taste in Eighteenth-Century England (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
"Comparison is ubiquitous and universal, Ming Xie forcefully argues, and merits investigation for its epistemological underpinnings beyond the political and the pragmatic. Conditions of Comparison is an invaluable study of comparativity, focusing particularly on intercultural encounters. Incommensurability and misrecognition are components of what he calls 'critical comparativity,' a perceptual process that he promotes as a necessity for the intensified global interconnections of the 21st century. Drawing on thinkers from across the humanities, Ming Xie makes a strong case for epistemologically informed comparative practices." -- Susan Stanford Friedman, Director of the Institute for Research in the Humanities and Virginia Woolf Professor of English and Women's Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, and author of Mappings: Feminism and the Cultural Geographies of Encounter (Princeton University Press, 1998)
[T]his book is of immense value and should find a home not only on the syllabuses of seminars devoted to intercultural inquiry but also in introductions to literary theory, where it could serve as a means of bringing intercultural inquiry into the central position within theoretical discussions that it should occupy by right and by necessity.
The real value of this book rests in its humble opening gesture that 'This is a small book about a big subject'... The writing and close attention to detail here impress on every page... It is particularly noteworthy that Xie's chapters take on enormous topics yet manage their focused argument. This book is continuously impressive and merits repeated attention.
"This is a book we've been awaiting for a long time. Moving beyond established critiques of conventional models of comparative study, Ming Xie provides a rigorous analysis of the conceptual foundations and methodological challenges of intercultural inquiry. His dissections of the critical categories underpinning current work on translation, world literature, post-colonial theory, and East/West studies-categories such as universalism, pluralism, orientalism, essentialism, incommensurability, and difference-are virtuoso performances: richly nuanced, philosophically grounded, and tremendously productive. Compelling both in its elaboration of the stakes and epistemological conditions of comparative practice and in its gestures towards a new meta-critical framework for global studies marked by flexibility, contingency, and reflexivity, this book will prove an essential touchstone for the theory and practice of comparative scholarship in the humanities." -- David Porter, Professor and Associate Chair of English, University of Michigan, USA, and author of The Chinese Taste in Eighteenth-Century England (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
"Comparison is ubiquitous and universal, Ming Xie forcefully argues, and merits investigation for its epistemological underpinnings beyond the political and the pragmatic. Conditions of Comparison is an invaluable study of comparativity, focusing particularly on intercultural encounters. Incommensurability and misrecognition are components of what he calls 'critical comparativity,' a perceptual process that he promotes as a necessity for the intensified global interconnections of the 21st century. Drawing on thinkers from across the humanities, Ming Xie makes a strong case for epistemologically informed comparative practices." -- Susan Stanford Friedman, Director of the Institute for Research in the Humanities and Virginia Woolf Professor of English and Women's Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, and author of Mappings: Feminism and the Cultural Geographies of Encounter (Princeton University Press, 1998)
[T]his book is of immense value and should find a home not only on the syllabuses of seminars devoted to intercultural inquiry but also in introductions to literary theory, where it could serve as a means of bringing intercultural inquiry into the central position within theoretical discussions that it should occupy by right and by necessity.
The real value of this book rests in its humble opening gesture that 'This is a small book about a big subject'... The writing and close attention to detail here impress on every page... It is particularly noteworthy that Xie's chapters take on enormous topics yet manage their focused argument. This book is continuously impressive and merits repeated attention.