A companion to comparative literature
"A Companion to Comparative Literature presents a collection of more than thirty original essays from established and emerging scholars, which explore the history, current state, and future of comparative literature. Features over thirty original essays from leading international contributors P...
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Other Authors: | , |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Chichester, West Sussex ; Malden, Mass. :
Wiley-Blackwell,
2011.
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Edition: | 1st ed. |
Series: | Blackwell companions to literature and culture ;
76. |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
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Table of Contents:
- Machine generated contents note: Introduction.PART I: ROADMAPS:1. Rey Chow.A Discipline of Tolerance.2. David Ferris.Why Compare?3. David Palumbo-Liu.Method and Congruity.4. Haun Saussy.Comparisons, World Literature, and the Common Denominator.5. Kenneth Surin.Comparative Literature in America: Attempt at a Genealogy.PART II. THEORETICAL DIRECTIONS:6. Stathis Gourgouris.The Poiein of Secular Criticism.7. Eric Hayot.Vanishing Horizons: Problems in the Comparison of China and the West.8. Efrain Kristal.Art and Literature in the Liquid Modern Age: On Richard Wollheim, Zygmunt Bauman and Yves Michaud.9. Michael Lucey.A Literary Object's Contextual Life.10. Sharon Marcus.The Theater of Comparative Literature.PART III: DISCIPLINARY INTERSECTIONS:11. Jorge Coronado.What Pictures Tell Us about the Letter: Visual and Literary Practices in Latin America.12. Richard Maxwell and Toby Miller.If there's a text in this class, where did it come from? Or, what does Marilyn Monroe have to do with The Sorrows of Young Man Werther?13. Todd Presner.Comparative Literature in the Age of Digital Humanities: On Possible Futures for a Discipline.14. Zoë Norridge.Comparing pain: theoretical explorations of suffering and working towards the particular.15. Gisèle Sapiro.Comparativism, Transfers, Entangled History: Sociological Perspectives on Literature.PART IV: LINGUISTIC TRAJECTORIES:16. Cathy Caruth.Orphaned Language: Traumatic Crossings in Literature and History.17. Simon Gikandi.Contested Grammars: Comparative Literature, Translation, and the Challenge of Locality.18. Mary Louise Pratt.Comparative Literature and the Global Languagescape.19. Nasrin Rahimieh.Persian Incursions: The Transnational Dynamics of Persian Literature.20. Mireille Rosello.Rudimentariness as home.PART V: POSTCOLONIAL MOBILITIES:21. Allison Crumly and Dominic Thomas.Afro-European Studies: Emerging Fields and New Directions.22. David Theo Goldberg.The Comparative and the Relational: Meditations on Racial Method.23. Deborah Jenson.Kidnapped Narratives: Mobility without Autonomy and the Nation/Novel Analogy.24. Françoise Lionnet.Counterpoint and Double Critique in Edward Said and Abdelkebir Khatibi:A Transcolonial Comparison.25. David Murphy.How French Studies became Transnational; Or postcolonialism as comparatism.26. Sangeeta Ray.Towards a Planetary Reading of Postcolonial and American Imaginative Eco-Graphies.PART VI: GLOBAL CONNECTIONS:27. Emily Apter.Terrestrial Humanism: Edward W. Said and the Politics of World Literature.28. Brian T. Edwards.Logics and Contexts of Circulation.29. Charles Forsdick."Worlds in Collision:" The Languages and Locations of World Literature.30. Graham Huggan.The Trouble with World Literature.