
Infinity for Marxists
Essays on Poetry and Capital
Christopher Nealon(Author)
Brill (Publisher)
Published on 19. January 2023
Book
Hardback
276 pages
978-90-04-53684-5 (ISBN)
Description
In these innovative essays on poetry and capitalism, collected over the last fifteen years, Christopher Nealon shines a light on the upsurge of anticapitalist poetry since the turn of the century, and develops fresh ways of thinking about how capitalist society shapes the reading and the writing of all poetry, whatever its political orientation. Breaking from half a century of postmodernist readings of poetry, and bypassing the false divide between formalist and historicist criticism, these essays chart a path toward a new Marxist poetics.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Leiden
Netherlands
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 23 mm
Weight
587 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-04-53684-5 (9789004536845)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Christopher Nealon is John Dewey Professor in the English Department at Johns Hopkins University. He is the author of Foundlings: Lesbian and Gay Historical Emotion before Stonewall (2001) and The Matter of Capital: Poetry and Crisis in The American Century (2011), and the co-editor, with Colleen Lye, of After Marx: Literature, Theory and Value in the Twenty-First Century (2022).
Content
9789004536845
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Camp Messianism, or the Hopes of Poetry in Late-Late Capitalism
2 The Poetic Case
3 Reading on The Left
4 Affect, Performativity, and Actually Existing Poetry
5 Infinity for Marxists
6 The Prynne Reflex
7 The Price of Value
8 The Anti-humanist Tone
9 Modernism, Critical Theory, and the Desire for Objecthood
10 Literary and Economic Value (with Joshua Clover)
11 Abstraction, Intuition, Poetry
References
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Camp Messianism, or the Hopes of Poetry in Late-Late Capitalism
2 The Poetic Case
3 Reading on The Left
4 Affect, Performativity, and Actually Existing Poetry
5 Infinity for Marxists
6 The Prynne Reflex
7 The Price of Value
8 The Anti-humanist Tone
9 Modernism, Critical Theory, and the Desire for Objecthood
10 Literary and Economic Value (with Joshua Clover)
11 Abstraction, Intuition, Poetry
References
Index