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Against Literature (Paperback)
Loot Price: R517
Discovery Miles 5 170
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Against Literature (Paperback)
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Loot Price R517
Discovery Miles 5 170
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Certain post-Romantic conceptions have seen literature as a
sanctioned space for the articulation of social dissidence and
heterogeneity. Yet recent scholarship has shown that literature did
not always have an oppositional character, that in its modern form
it emerged precisely as a central ideological practice of European
absolutism in the 16th and 17th centuries. Literature was one of
the conditions responsible for emergence of the modern
nation-state; and its institutionalization was founded on the
incorporation and neutralization of contradictions. This study
attempts to answer the following question: Is there not a way of
thinking about literature that is "outside" or "against"
literature? Beverley argues for a negation of the literary that
would allow non-literary forms of cultural practice to displace
literature's hegemony. Beverley reminds us that contemporary
theorists speak of literatures with historically and
socially-specific conditions of production and reading formations;
that is, mediated relations between text and context. He then
begins his explorations with Latin American literature, which he
says, is endowed with the legacy of Columbus - discovery, conquest,
and colonization - an ambiguous cultural function, making it both a
colonial institution and a historical agent of nation formation. He
moves from this consideration to an extensive discussion of the
post-colonial "testimonio", poised between literature and the
dynamics of subaltern culture. Beverley's demonstration - of how
the internal logic that has always driven the dominant conception
of literature must of necessity explode into cultural politics - is
a significant intervention into current debates about cultural
studies, the canon, and multiculturalism. John Beverley is the
author of "Aspects of Gongora's `Soledades'" and, with Mark
Zimmerman, co-author of "Literature and Politics in the Central
American Revolutions".
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