
The Unraveled Plot
Thinking Literature, Community, and Politics with Jean-Luc Nancy
Aukje van Rooden(Author)
State University of New York Press
Published on 1. October 2025
Book
Hardback
310 pages
979-8-8558-0393-8 (ISBN)
Description
Explores the connection between Jean-Luc Nancy's political works on community and his works on art and literature, thus providing not only a comprehensive introduction into Nancy's work but also a broader examination of the social and political role of literature.
What is the connection between the work of community and the work of literature? And in what way is literature implied in Jean-Luc Nancy's "inoperative" community? The Unraveled Plot investigates the relation between two domains that have only separately been addressed in the reception of Nancy's work: his political works on community on the one hand and his works on art and literature on the other. Lucidly traversing Nancy's entire oeuvre, Aukje van Rooden offers not only a comprehensive introduction into Nancy's work but also a much broader reflection on the social and political role of literature. Situating Nancy's thought within a larger philosophical tradition leading from German Romanticism to contemporary social and political theory, she offers new insights, with and beyond Nancy, on the forming of communities and how literature can play a role.
What is the connection between the work of community and the work of literature? And in what way is literature implied in Jean-Luc Nancy's "inoperative" community? The Unraveled Plot investigates the relation between two domains that have only separately been addressed in the reception of Nancy's work: his political works on community on the one hand and his works on art and literature on the other. Lucidly traversing Nancy's entire oeuvre, Aukje van Rooden offers not only a comprehensive introduction into Nancy's work but also a much broader reflection on the social and political role of literature. Situating Nancy's thought within a larger philosophical tradition leading from German Romanticism to contemporary social and political theory, she offers new insights, with and beyond Nancy, on the forming of communities and how literature can play a role.
Reviews / Votes
"This is a book people will want to read. It fills a gap in the secondary literature on Nancy's work, which has tended to concentrate on his work as a political philosopher, first, and his work on art, second. Van Rooden takes seriously the work of thinking through the relations between politics, community, and literature-all three-in Nancy's work." - Anne O'Byrne, Stony Brook University, the State University of New YorkMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Albany, NY
United States
Target group
College/higher education
US School Grade: College Graduate Student and over
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 23 mm
Weight
656 gr
ISBN-13
979-8-8558-0393-8 (9798855803938)
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
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
10/2025
State University of New York Press
€38.99
Available for download
Person
Aukje van Rooden is philosopher and literary theorist working in the Philosophy Department of the University of Amsterdam. She is the author of, notably, Literature, Autonomy and Commitment and coeditor of Re-treating Religion: Deconstructing Christianity with Jean-Luc Nancy.
Content
Abbreviations of Works by Jean-Luc Nancy
Introduction: Literature, Community, and Politics
1. The Romantic Heritage
German Romanticism
The Romantic Notion of Work
The Romantic Work as a Model Without Model
Romantic Politics
The Reverse Side of Romanticism (Nancy, Lacoue-Labarthe)
The Future Is Fragmentary
2. The Work of Community
Myth Interrupted (Nancy, Aristotle, Balzac)
Myth Without Mythology
Rethinking Communism
Rethinking Democracy (Nancy, Heidegger)
Sharing Community in and as Literature (Nancy, Blanchot)
The Fable Becoming the Real World (Nancy, Nietzsche, Lyotard)
3. An Ontological Poetics
Nancy's Poetics
Rethinking Art (Nancy, Hegel)
A Poetics of Everydayness (Nancy, Heidegger)
Singular Plural Poetics
Poetic Language
Language Beyond Language (Nancy, Derrida)
4. Literature's Unworked Force
The Scope and Limit of Nancy's Poetics
The Distinctive Force of Literature (Nancy, Ranciere)
A Certain Way of Speaking
The Exigency of "Lying" (Nancy, Arendt, Derrida)
Literature as Unworked Performative
The Language of Fiction (Nancy, Blanchot)
Being Responsible for Literature
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Introduction: Literature, Community, and Politics
1. The Romantic Heritage
German Romanticism
The Romantic Notion of Work
The Romantic Work as a Model Without Model
Romantic Politics
The Reverse Side of Romanticism (Nancy, Lacoue-Labarthe)
The Future Is Fragmentary
2. The Work of Community
Myth Interrupted (Nancy, Aristotle, Balzac)
Myth Without Mythology
Rethinking Communism
Rethinking Democracy (Nancy, Heidegger)
Sharing Community in and as Literature (Nancy, Blanchot)
The Fable Becoming the Real World (Nancy, Nietzsche, Lyotard)
3. An Ontological Poetics
Nancy's Poetics
Rethinking Art (Nancy, Hegel)
A Poetics of Everydayness (Nancy, Heidegger)
Singular Plural Poetics
Poetic Language
Language Beyond Language (Nancy, Derrida)
4. Literature's Unworked Force
The Scope and Limit of Nancy's Poetics
The Distinctive Force of Literature (Nancy, Ranciere)
A Certain Way of Speaking
The Exigency of "Lying" (Nancy, Arendt, Derrida)
Literature as Unworked Performative
The Language of Fiction (Nancy, Blanchot)
Being Responsible for Literature
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index