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The Protoliterary - Steps Toward an Anthropology of Culture (Hardcover)
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The Protoliterary - Steps Toward an Anthropology of Culture (Hardcover)
Series: Writing Science
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This is a broad-ranging and ambitious attempt to rethink aesthetic
and literary studies in terms of an "anthropology" of symbolic
media generally. Central to the author's argument is the
proposition that the idea of literature--at least as it has been
understood in the West since the eighteenth century--as the
paradigm for artistic experience is both limited and limiting. In
its place, the author offers a more general theory of aesthetic
experience appropriate to a wide range of media (in the term's
broadest sense) and geared toward performativity and bodily
experience.
The author develops the idea of the "protoliterary" as a
cultural-aesthetic discourse prior to and external to the
"literary" as traditionally conceived in Western aesthetics.
Manifestations of the protoliterary tend to occur within forms of
multimedia theatricalization in which suggestive images of the body
loom large. The appeal of the protoliterary lies in its ability to
function on both cognitive and somatic levels, thereby neutralizing
such distinctions as self/society and reality/fiction.
The author's argument is indebted to John Dewey's belief in a basic
human need for aesthetic experience, a need that can be met in a
variety of ways, from tattoos and scarification, through sports,
parades, and cosmetics, to literature, opera, and film. From this
basis the book theorizes a history of the development of separate,
hierarchical arts in the West while suggesting that independent
histories of single arts and artistic experience are no longer
desirable or even possible. Although the genesis of particular
forms of media are inextricably linked to specific historical,
sociological, and technological conditions, their potential
functions and effects are not tied to those conditions, nor should
they be.
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