In History, Literature, Critical Theory, Dominick LaCapra
continues his exploration of the complex relations between history
and literature, here considering history as both process and
representation. A trio of chapters at the center of the volume
concern the ways in which history and literature (particularly the
novel) impact and question each other. In one of the chapters
LaCapra revisits Gustave Flaubert, pairing him with Joseph Conrad.
Other chapters pair J. M. Coetzee and W. G. Sebald, Jonathan
Littell's novel, The Kindly Ones, and Saul Friedlander's
two-volume, prizewinning history Nazi Germany and the Jews.
A recurrent motif of the book is the role of the sacred, its
problematic status in sacrifice, its virulent manifestation in
social and political violence (notably the Nazi genocide), its role
or transformations in literature and art, and its multivalent
expressions in "postsecular" hopes, anxieties, and quests. LaCapra
concludes the volume with an essay on the place of violence in the
thought of Slavoj Zizek. In LaCapra's view Zizek's provocative
thought "at times has uncanny echoes of earlier reflections on, or
apologies for, political and seemingly regenerative, even
sacralized violence."
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