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Silence and the Rest: Verbal Skepticism in Russian Poetry: Studies in Russian Literature and Theory

Autor Sofya Khagi
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 aug 2013
Scholars have long noted the deeply rooted veneration of the power of the word—both the expressive and communicative capacities of language—in Russian literature and culture. In her ambitious book Silence and the Rest, Sofya Khagi illuminates a consistent counternarrative, showing how, throughout its entire history, Russian poetry can be read as an argument for what she calls “verbal skepticism.” Although she deals with many poets from a two-century tradition, Khagi gives special emphasis to Osip Mandelstam, Joseph Brodsky, and Timur Kibirov, offering readings that add new layers of meaning to their work. She posits a long-running dialogue between the poets and the philosophers and theorists who have also been central to the antiverbal strain of Russian culture. Unlike its Western counterpart, the Russian philosophical and theological doubt of the efficacy of the word still grants the author, and literature itself, an ethical force—the inadequacies of language notwithstanding.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780810129207
ISBN-10: 0810129205
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Northwestern University Press
Colecția Northwestern University Press
Seria Studies in Russian Literature and Theory


Notă biografică

SOFYA KHAGI is an associate professor in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Michigan. She is the author of Pelevin and Unfreedom: Poetics, Politics, Metaphysics, forthcoming from Northwestern University Press.

Cuprins

Introduction. Silence and the Rest                                                                             Page 3
Verbal Skepticism and Existential Arguments                                               Page 15
1. Theological Ineffability                                                                  Page 15
2. (Pre)-Romantic Inexpressibility                                                      Page 18
3. Absurdist Logophobia                                                                    Page 24
Russian Contributions to Verbal Skepticism                                                  Page 34
Western Philosophy versus Russian Philosophy versus Russian Poetry         Page 49
Chapter 1. Initiating the Paradigm: The Inexpressible in Russian
Romanticism                                                                                                   Page 56
Romantic Inexpressibility                                                                               Page 58
Batiushkov, Zhukovsky, Venevitinov: Inexpressible Ideality and
Incommunicability                                                                                          Page 60
1. Batiushkov                                                                                      Page 60
2. Zhukovsky                                                                                      Page 62
3. Venevitinov                                                                                                Page 71
Tiutchev: Ontology of Otherness and the Operative Paradox                       Page 74
Baratynsky and Lermontov: Incommunicability, Silence, Nihilism               Page 87
1. Baratynsky                                                                                      Page 87
2. Lermontov                                                                                      Page 100
Chapter 2. Osip Mandelstam’s Many-Voiced Silentiums                                          Page 109
(Pre)-Modernist Verbal Skepticism: Fet, Symbolism, and Post-
Symbolism                                                                                                      Page 110
Silentium of “Silentium”                                                                                 Page 123
Other Shades of Silence                                                                                 Page 138
From Silver Silentium to Iron Silence                                                 Page 152
Chapter 3. A Figure that Leaves You Speechless: Joseph Brodsky
on Death and Language                                                                                              Page 173
Residence Permit for Heaven: Divine Ineffability and Its Discontents         Page 175
Linguistic Lunacy                                                                                           Page 202
A Slice of the Monotone of Infinity                                                               Page 207
The Condition We Call Exile and the Death of the Author                           Page 217
Chapter 4. “A Poet Is Less Than a Poet”: Timur Kibirov’s Merry
Logophobia                                                                                                     Page 242
L(aughing) O(ut) L(oud): The Conceptualist Lineage of Verbal
Skepticism                                                                                                       Page 243
Kibirov’s Mechanics of Verbal Subversion                                                    Page 249
Like Rotten Fish: Beyond Laughter in Kibirov                                              Page 269
Bad Infinity and Eternal Recurrence                                                              Page 276
Conclusion. Logophobia in the Land of Logos                                                          Page 287
Specificities of the Russian Paradigm                                                                        Page 294
Dichten and Denken                                                                                       Page 303
Widening the Space of Ineffability                                                                Page 310
Notes                                                                                                                           Page 315
Notes to Introduction                                                                                     Page 315
Notes to Chapter 1                                                                                          Page 328
Notes to Chapter 2                                                                                          Page 340
Notes to Chapter 3                                                                                          Page 364
Notes to Chapter 4                                                                                          Page 385
Notes to Conclusion                                                                                       Page 390
Bibliography                                                                                                               Page 396

Descriere

Silence and the Rest argues that throughout its entire history, Russian poetry can be read as an argument for “verbal skepticism,” positing a long-running dialogue between poets, philosophers, and theorists central to the antiverbal strain of Russian culture.