The Matter of High Words: Naturalism, Normativity, and the Postwar Sage
Autor Robert Chodaten Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 oct 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190682156
ISBN-10: 0190682159
Pagini: 354
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190682159
Pagini: 354
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty.
Robert Chodat's new book is an intellectual feast of multi-disciplinary learning and engagement that offers a powerful challenge to the still most prestigious current of modernist aesthetics - the primacy of experience and sensuous particularity - which celebrates mute showing over discursive telling. He brings to the fore a vital counter-tradition of the post-war 'sage', offering fresh configurations, scrupulous analysis, and passion for bringing philosophy and literature into conversation. The result is a much-needed, stirring, and important book.
Chodat's book is both enormously erudite and original. Offering a brilliant new view of some of the best American literature following the Second World War, it makes wonted notions regarding high- and postmodernism alike utterly obsolete...This book is a must read for anyone interested in understanding contemporary philosophy and literature.
Robert Chodat's new book tracks the twinned impulses of five major post-War American writers to reclaim such high terms of self-responsibility as duty, honor, justice, courage, and love but also to register the disruptive particulars that haunt such reclaimings. In this way he shows compellingly how the novel and philosophy in their modulating mutual inflections both enact and register the continuing vicissitudes of modern reflective thought.
For those working in the humanities and social sciences who have felt compelled to question the pervasive consensus that 'high ideas' - abstract concepts and values - can only distort and injure; that beings and environments to which we apply such ideas are fundamentally unrepresentable much less knowable; and that such ideas are therefore illegitimate bases for human action, both individual and collective, Robert Chodat's new book should offer a welcome tonic...This book delivers a powerful challenge to the prevailing theoretical commitments of nearly six decades of literary scholarship.
Robert Chodat's new book is an intellectual feast of multi-disciplinary learning and engagement that offers a powerful challenge to the still most prestigious current of modernist aesthetics - the primacy of experience and sensuous particularity - which celebrates mute showing over discursive telling. He brings to the fore a vital counter-tradition of the post-war 'sage', offering fresh configurations, scrupulous analysis, and passion for bringing philosophy and literature into conversation. The result is a much-needed, stirring, and important book.
Chodat's book is both enormously erudite and original. Offering a brilliant new view of some of the best American literature following the Second World War, it makes wonted notions regarding high- and postmodernism alike utterly obsolete...This book is a must read for anyone interested in understanding contemporary philosophy and literature.
Robert Chodat's new book tracks the twinned impulses of five major post-War American writers to reclaim such high terms of self-responsibility as duty, honor, justice, courage, and love but also to register the disruptive particulars that haunt such reclaimings. In this way he shows compellingly how the novel and philosophy in their modulating mutual inflections both enact and register the continuing vicissitudes of modern reflective thought.
For those working in the humanities and social sciences who have felt compelled to question the pervasive consensus that 'high ideas' - abstract concepts and values - can only distort and injure; that beings and environments to which we apply such ideas are fundamentally unrepresentable much less knowable; and that such ideas are therefore illegitimate bases for human action, both individual and collective, Robert Chodat's new book should offer a welcome tonic...This book delivers a powerful challenge to the prevailing theoretical commitments of nearly six decades of literary scholarship.
Notă biografică
Robert Chodat is an Associate Professor of English at Boston University, where he specializes in post-WWII American fiction and the relationship between literature and philosophy. He is the author of Worldly Acts and Sentient Things: The Persistence of Agency from Stein to DeLillo (2008).