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The Work of Difference addresses a fundamental ontological
question: What is literature? And at the heart of this question, it
argues, is the problem of the new. How is it that new works or new
forms are possible within the rule-governed orders of history,
language use, or the social? How are new works in turn recognizable
to already-existing institutions? Tracing the relationship between
literature and the problem of newness back to a set of concerns
first articulated in early German romanticism, this book goes on to
mount a critique of romantic tendencies in contemporary criticism
in order, ultimately, to develop an original theory of literary
production. Along the way, it offers new readings of major
modernist novels by Samuel Beckett, Marcel Proust, and Gertrude
Stein.
The Work of Difference addresses a fundamental ontological
question: What is literature? And at the heart of this question, it
argues, is the problem of the new. How is it that new works or new
forms are possible within the rule-governed orders of history,
language use, or the social? How are new works in turn recognizable
to already-existing institutions? Tracing the relationship between
literature and the problem of newness back to a set of concerns
first articulated in early German romanticism, this book goes on to
mount a critique of romantic tendencies in contemporary criticism
in order, ultimately, to develop an original theory of literary
production. Along the way, it offers new readings of major
modernist novels by Samuel Beckett, Marcel Proust, and Gertrude
Stein.
This collection revisits A Theory of Literary Production (1966) to
show how Pierre Macherey's remarkable-and still provocative-early
work can contribute to contemporary discussions about the act of
reading and the politics of formal analysis. Across a series of
historically and philosophically contextualized readings, the
volume's contributors interrogate Macherey's work on a range of
pressing issues, including the development of a theory of reading
and criticism, the relationship between the spoken and the
unspoken, the labor of poetic determination and of literature's
resistance to ideological context, the literary relevance of a
Spinozist materialism, the process of racial subjectification and
the ontology of Blackness, and a theorization of the textual
surface. Pierre Macherey and the Case of Literary Production also
includes three new texts by Macherey, presented here in English for
the first time: his postface to the revised French edition of A
Theory of Literary Production; "Reading Althusser," in which
Macherey analyzes the concept of symptomatic reading; and a
comprehensive interview in which Macherey reflects on the
historical conditions of his early work, the long arc of his career
at the intersection of philosophy and literature, and the ongoing
importance of Louis Althusser's thought. Recent translations of
Macherey's work into English have introduced new readers to the
critic's enduring power and originality. Timely in its questions
and teeming with fresh insights, Pierre Macherey and the Case of
Literary Production demonstrates the depths to which his work
resonates, now more than ever.
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