Barbara Johnson investigates the significant and illuminating ways in which both literature and criticism are "critically different" from what they purport to be. Her subtle and provocative studies of Balzac, Mallarme, Baudelaire, Apollinaire, Melville, Poe, Barthes, Lacan, Austin, and Derrida take a refreshing new approach to the fundamental questions of meaning, interpretation, and the relationship between literature and criticism. In each of seven essays, a clear, precise, and detailed reading of the rhetoric of one or more literary or critical works reveals the text's fundamental discrepancies, ambiguities, and contradictions. If rhetoric is seen as language's capacity to differ from literal statement, and if "to differ" can also mean "to disagree, " then the reading of the rhetoric of literature and theory here is an attempt to capture the logic of a text's own disagreement with itself.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
When it is done well, deconstructive criticism can be a pleasure to read, as it is in the case of Barbara Johnson. Her discussions of the reading process... are patient, ingenious, and persuasive. -- Robert Scholes Yale Review When it is done well, deconstructive criticism can be a pleasure to read, as it is in the case of Barbara Johnson. Her discussions of the reading process... are patient, ingenious, and persuasive. -- Robert Scholes Yale Review
Sprache
Verlagsort
Produkt-Hinweis
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Dicke: 10 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-8018-2728-0 (9780801827280)
DOI
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Barbara Johnson is professor of French and comparative literature at Harvard University. She is author of Defigurations du langage poetique and translator of Jacques Derrida's La Dissemination.
Autor*in
Harvard University
Opening Remarks
Part I. Sexuality and Difference
Chapter 1. The Critical Difference: BartheS/BalZac
Chapter 2. Allegory's Trip-Tease: The White Waterlily
Part II. Poetry and Difference
Chapter 3. Poetry and Its Double: Two invitations au voyage
Chapter 4. Poetry and Performative Language: Mallarme and Austin
Chapter 5. Poetry and Syntax: What the Gypsy Knew
Part III. Difference in the Act
Chapter 6. Melville's Fist: The Execution of Billy Budd
Chapter 7. The Frame of Reference: Poe, Lacan, Derrida
Notes
Index