|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Terrorism has long been a popular subject for American fiction
writers. This book argues that terrorism in 1990s novels by Paul
Auster, Philip Roth, and Bret Easton Ellis serves as a key trope to
interrogate the limits of writing and the power of literature.
Based on the complex literary and philosophical thought of Maurice
Blanchot, this study deals with the writer's terrorist temptation,
language's investment in violence, and literature's negotiation of
radical alterity. Auster's, Roth's, and Ellis's novels elucidate
contemporary political and economic developments as well as our
cultural fear of, and fascination with, terrorism. The writing of
terrorism can thus become the foundation of a different politics
where, according to Maurice Blanchot, "there is no explosion except
a book."
Rather than turning backward and remembering 9/11, this book sets
out to reflect on how the events of September 11, 2001, have
shifted our perspectives on a whole series of political, economic,
social, and cultural processes. Beyond 9/11 raises the question how
the intense debates on the 2001 terrorist attacks and their
aftermaths have come to shape our present moment and frame what
lies ahead. At the same time, this collection acknowledges that the
label "9/11" has often bracketed cultural complexities we have only
begun to understand. In Beyond 9/11, contributors from the fields
of American studies, political science, economics, history,
theology, and the arts reappraise the cultural climate and the
global impact of the United States in the second decade of the
twenty-first century.
This collection of essays explores the poetics and politics of
US-American poetry's diverse and distinct investments in the
imaginary space of 'the Orient'. Reading American poets - from
Emily Dickinson to Frank Bidart, from Ralph Waldo Emerson to Kimiko
Hahn - the contributions show how tropes of the Orient have
fabricated screens onto which we project matters by no means
foreign, but very close to home. As we accompany American poets on
their journeys East, we are bound to arrive in - culturally
specific - territories of the West. Traversing cultural crossroads
and rediscovering places as 'exotic' as Banyan ashrams and
Bostonian living rooms, these expeditions shed new light on crucial
moments of American literary and cultural history. And, on the way,
they reassess what Edward Said, thirty years ago, conceived of as
Orientalism, and how far this concept has travelled in the
meantime.
|
You may like...
Widows
Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, …
Blu-ray disc
R22
R19
Discovery Miles 190
|