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Dysfluencies: On Speech Disorders in Modern Literature

Autor Dr. Chris Eagle
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 mai 2015
Dysfluencies is the first comprehensive study of how speech disorders are portrayed in modern literature. Tracing the roots of this interaction between literary practice and speech pathology back to the rise of aphasiology in the 1860s, Dysfluencies examines portrayals of disordered speech by writers like Zola, Proust, Joyce, Melville, and Mishima, as well as contemporary writers like Philip Roth, Gail Jones, and Jonathan Lethem. Dysfluencies thus speaks directly to the growing interest at present, both in popular culture and the Humanities, regarding the status of the Self in relation to speech pathology. The need for this type of study is clear considering the number of prominent writers whose works foreground disorders of speech: Melville, Zola, Kesey, Mishima, Roth, et al. Moreover, thinkers like Freud, Bergson, and Jakobson were similarly concerned with the implications of language breakdown. This volume shows this concern began with the rise of neurology and aphasiology, which challenged spiritual conceptions of language and replaced them with a view of language as a material process rooted in the brain. Dysfluencies traces the history of this interaction between literary practice and speech pathology, arguing that works of literature have responded differently to the issue of language breakdown as the dominant views on the issue have shifted from neurological (circa 1860s to 1920s) to psychological (circa 1920s to 1980s), and back to neurological during the so-called "decade of the Brain" (the 1990s).
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781501308666
ISBN-10: 1501308661
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Caracteristici

Examines modernist (Proust and Joyce) as well as contemporary (Roth and Lethem) literature

Notă biografică

Chris Eagle (PhD, University of California, Berkeley) is Research Lecturer in the Writing and Society Research Centre at the University of Western Sydney, Australia.

Cuprins

AcknowledgementsIntroduction: The Neurolinguistic TurnChapter 1: Aphasia and Neurology in Zola and Proust. "la vièille paralytique". "nervous being". "raucous sounds". "menacé d'aphasie". "whispered words"Chapter 2: Speech Disorders and Shell Shock in World War I Writing. "Kindred Disorders". "no stammer previous to shock". "You can't communicate noise". "the new voice from Craiglockhart"Chapter 3: Stuttering and Sexuality in Woolf, Melville, Kesey, and Mishima. "shy and stammering". "organic hesitancy". "m-m-m-m-mamma". "The Rusty Key"Chapter 4: Stuttering, Violence, and the Politics of Voice in Graves, Roth, and Jones. "vox populi". "though he do limp and stammer a bit". "angry because she stutters". "haltings and erasures"Chapter 5: Tourettic Speech in Jonathan Lethem's Motherless Brooklyn. "la maladie des tics". "the world (or my brain - same thing)". "to tic freely". "Those walls of language". "Tourette's muse was with me" Conclusion: On Speech Disorders in Theory BibliographyIndex

Recenzii

Dysfluencies: On Speech Disorders in Modern Literature is an authoritative and important book that creates a model for interdisciplinary studies that will enlarge the horizon of scholarly work for years to come. Its study of modern literatures - British, American, French, Japanese, Australian - creates a significant rethinking of literary history in relation to neurological and clinical understandings of representations of behavior, personality, and motivation in literary texts. It does so by bringing together the diverse disciplines of medicine, neurology, psychology, and poetics in creating a rich sense of the power of language and discourse as it is inflected by intellectual culture. Its understanding of speech disorder as not only a deficit but also as a "superabundance" of linguistic function has much to teach medicine and neurology, just as it demonstrates throughout how literary studies and simply the experience of reading can be enriched in the light of the systematic knowledge and practical work of neuroscience and medicine. For readers in all these disciplines, Dysfluencies offers a mode of comprehension that will make their understanding and work more inclusive, more humane, and more fulfilling.
Dysfluencies is a critical genealogy of modern literature's struggle to understand the faculty of language, not what we say or how, but the very fact that we can say it. Reading for the moments when that faculty deserts us, Eagle offers a wide-ranging but tightly focused literary history from a surprising angle, but also undertakes a thoroughly original reflection on literatures attempt to grapple with its most basic material.