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Hip Figures
Post 45 publishes groundbreaking work on U. S. culture after the Second World War. Our goal is to question rather than reproduce critical orthodoxiesto ask basic questions about how to read and categorize American writing since 1945. Though the series will gravitate toward literature, we welcome writing on a wide range of popular and avant-garde culture, including film, drama, music, graphic arts, and computer-based forms.
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Projections
TAble Of COnTenTS
literature & Theory .....2-15 Philosophy .....................16-19 exam Copy Policy ............ 13 Ordering .................................14
Cover drawing: Friese Undine. The International College of Somnology. Ink and enamel on aluminum, 2007.
Original, provocative, deeply informed, and a much needed corrective to the presentist bias of comics studies.
Charles Hatfield, California State University, Northridge, author of Alternative Comics: An Emerging Literature
This highly original and engaging study makes a significant contribution to American film history and to film and media theory, particularly media industry studies. no other author has analyzed studio authorship with the depth, care, and complexity that Christensen exhibits here, nor has such an argument been supported with close readings of individual films.
Thomas Schatz, University of Texas at Austin
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Henry James defied posterity to disturb his bones: he was adamant that his legacy be based exclusively on his publications and that his private life and writings remain forever private. Despite this, almost immediately after his death in 1916 an intense struggle began among his family and his literary disciples to control his posthumous reputation, a struggle that was continued by later generations of critics and biographers. Monopolizing the Master gives a blow-by-blow account of this conflict, which aroused intense feelings of jealousy, suspicion, and proprietorship among those who claimed to be the just custodians of Jamess literary legacy. With an unprecedented amount of new evidence now available, Michael Anesko reveals the remarkable social, political, and sexual intrigue that inspiredand influencedthe deliberate construction of the Legend of the Master.
Michael Anesko combines scholarship with the writers craft to engage both the seasoned Jamesian and the educated general reader. The story he tells is significant and compelling: it promises to change once again the way that we understand Henry James, all while opening a window onto academes seamier side.
Greg Zacharias, Creighton University
As this extraordinary work of scholarship shows, it would be family, friends, publishers, biographers, and critics who strove to perpetuate one or another Henry James in accordance with their view of the dead author. Anesko gives a vivid presence to these secondary actors like the novelists nephew, Percy lubbock (the first editor of Jamess letters), and leon edel, whose successful campaign to obtain and retain exclusive rights to publish Jamess letters and biography is a scandal of modern scholarship only now being exposed in detail.
Millicent Bell, Emerita, Boston University
This book targets one of the humanities most widely held premises: namely, that the European Enlightenment laid the groundwork for modern imperialism. It argues instead that the Enlightenments vision of empire calls our own historical and theoretical paradigms into question. While eighteenth-century British India has not received nearly the same attention as nineteenth- and twentieth-century empires, it is the place where colonial rule and Enlightenment reason first became entwined. The Stillbirth of Capital makes its case by examining every work about British India written by a major author from 1670 to 1815. This ambitious book takes on contemporary critics of colonial discourse studies and makes a powerful argument about the violent histories of european militarized trading companies in the Indian Ocean and the capacity of eighteenth-century texts to critically register these violent practices.
Suvir Kaul, University of Pennsylvania
9780804775236 Paper $24.95 $19.96 sale 9780804775229 Cloth $80.00 $64.00 sale
Ends of Enlightenment
John Bender
Ends of Enlightenment explores Raymond Birn three realms of eighteenth-century Today, we are inclined to believe European innovation that remain that intellectual freedom has no active in the twenty-first century: greater adversary than the censor. the realist novel, philosophical thought, and the physical sciences, In eighteenth-century France, the matter was more complicated. especially human anatomy. This Royal censors envisioned thembooks fresh perspective considselves not as fulfilling a mission ers the novel as an art but also as of state-sponsored repression a force in thinking. The critical but rather as guiding the literdistance afforded by a view back across the centuries allows Bender ary traffic of the Enlightenment. In essence, eighteenth-century to redefine such novelists as French censors served as cultural Defoe, Fielding, Goldsmith, Godintermediaries who bore responwin, and Laclos by placing them sibility for expanding public along philosophers and scientists awareness of the progressive like Newton, Locke, and Hume thought of their time. but also alongside engravings by Hogarth and by anatomist WilOffers richly documented insight liam Hunter. His book probes the into the complex mental world kinship among realism, hypothof enlightenment-era censors, esis, and scientific fact, defining in along with a compelling account the process the rhetorical basis of of how the government manpublic communication during the aged their work, and in the effort, Enlightenment. ended up encapsulating so many bender is our best index to the of the key paradoxes of modernextraordinary efflorescence of ization in the eighteenth century. eighteenth-century studies at the H-France turn into the new millennium. His 216 pp., 2012 oeuvre is an essential handbook for 9780804763592 Cloth $60.00 $48.00 sale those who care about the legacy of enlightenment.
Clifford Siskin, New York University
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An Illustrated Biography
Translated by Tomas Tranus This richly illustrated biography is the first book in English to chronicle the life of Nelly Sachs (18911970), recipient of the 1966 Nobel Prize in Literature. The book follows Sachs from her secluded years in Berlin as the only child of assimilated German Jews, through her last-minute flight from the Nazis in 1940, to her exile in peaceful Swedena time of poverty and isolation, but also of growing fame. Enriched by over 300 images of Sachss manuscripts, photographs, and possessions, Nelly Sachs, Flight and Metamorphosis not only offers detailed insights into the contexts of Sachss formation as a writer, but also looks at themes of trauma and testimony in her central works. Aris Fioretos draws upon many previously unknown manuscripts, documents, medical records, and photos to produce the first reliably detailed narratives of Sachss foundational experiences: her teenage years when she experienced the unrequited love later designated as the source for her entire oeuvre; her involvement with the Jewish Cultural Leagueseven years marked by mounting terror but also by her first public recognition as a writer; and her exposure to the radical Modernism of Swedish poetry in the 1940s.
for some years the time has been ripe for a literary biography of nelly Sachs. now these thorough, thoughtful, deeply studied pages, enlivened by remarkable images, should become a definitive source. Along with her close comrade Paul Celan, though not wholly like him, Sachs draws us into a molten history we forget at our peril.
John Felstiner, author of Translating Neruda: The Way to Macchu Picchu, Paul Celan: Poet, Survivor, Jew, and Can Poetry Save the Earth? A Field Guide to Nature Poems
The Collected Letters of Robinson Jeffers, with Selected Letters of Una Jeffers
Volume Two, 19311939
Edited by James Karman
The 1930s marked a turning point for Robinson Jeffers, both in his career as a poet and in his private life. The letters collected in this second volume of annotated correspondence document Jeffers rising fame as a poet, his controversial response to the turmoil of his time, his struggles as a writer, the growth and maturation of his twin sons, and the network of friends and acquaintances that surrounded him. The letters also provide an intimate portrait of Jeffers relationship to his wife Unaincluding a full account of the 1938 crisis at Mabel Dodge Luhans home in Taos, New Mexico that nearly destroyed their marriage. These letters are crucial to anyone working seriously on Jeffers and his poetry and will deeply reward any reader interested in his work and life.
Tim Hunt, Illinois State University
320 pp., 339 figures, 2012 9780804775311 Paper $29.95 $23.96 sale 9780804775304 Cloth $90.00 $72.00 sale
Theater of State
Nineteenth-century Britain was a world in play. The Victorians invented the weekend and built hundreds of parks and playgrounds. In the wake of Darwin, they re-imagined nature as a contest for survival. The playful child became a symbol of the future. A world in play means two things: a world in flux and a world trapped, like Alice in Wonderland, in a ludic microcosm of itself. The book explores the extent to which play (competition, leisure, mischief, luck, festivity, imagination) pervades nineteenthcentury literature and culture and forms the foundations of the modern self. Play made the Victorian world cohere and betrayed the illusoriness of that coherence. This is the paradox of modernity. Kaiser gives an account of how certain Victorian misfitsworking-class melodramatists of the 1830s, the reclusive Emily Bront, free spirits Robert Louis Stevenson and John Muir, mischievous Oscar Wildestruggled to make sense of this new world. In so doing, they discovered the art of modern life.
It has been a long time since I have read any new critic who has made me sit up and take notice with virtually every line, but Matthew Kaiser is such a critic, a new and potentially major voice in literary criticism. The book is brilliantly written, witty without being cute, profoundly sensitive to language, and truly original.
George Levine, Emeritus, Rutgers University
This book chronicles the expansion and creation of new public spheres in and around Parliament in the early Stuart period. It focuses on two closely interconnected narratives: the changing nature of communication and discourse within parliamentary chambers and the interaction of Parliament with the wider world of political dialogue and the dissemination of information. Concentrating on the rapidly changing practices of Parliament in print culture, rhetorical strategy, and lobbying during the 1620s, this book demonstrates that Parliament not only moved toward the center stage of politics but also became the center of the postReformation public sphere. frames the demotics, theatrics, and staging of parliamentary speech in terms of the history of communication. no account of early modern politics will be complete without this.
David Cressy, The Ohio State University
Sophisticated, theoretically astute, and unfailingly interesting, The World in Play makes a compelling case for the centrality of play to Victorian conceptions of modernity.
Stephen Arata, University of Virginia
Even as actresses become increasingly marginalized by Hollywood, French cinema is witnessing an explosion of female talenta Golden Age unlike anything the world has seen since the days of Stanwyck, Hepburn, Davis, and Garbo. In France, the joy of acting is alive and well. Scores of French actresses are doing the best work of their lives in movies tailored to their star images and unique personalities. Yet virtually no one this side of the Atlantic even knows about them. Viewers who feel shortchanged by Hollywood will be thrilled to discover The Beauty of the Real. This book showcases a range of contemporary French actresses to an audience that will know how to appreciate theman American public hungry for the exact qualities that these women represent. To spend time with them, to admire their flashing intelligence and fearless willingness to depict life as it is lived, gives us what were looking for in movies but so rarely find: insights into womanhood, meditations on the dark and light aspects of lifes journey, revelations and explorations that move viewers to reflect on their own lives. The stories they bring to the screen leave us feeling renewed and excited about movies again.
laSalle understands how women in french movies are allowed to be deeper, older, and more real than most Hollywood characters.
Roger Ebert
Mick laSalles informal, lucid prose brings alive the magic of french cinema and its brilliant array of female actors, contrasting them with their American equivalents and, in so doing, revealing the distinctive character of french filmmaking. This book is especially valuable for its first-hand interviews with some of frances greatest screen actresses.
Peter Cowie, Film historian, author, and founding editor of the International Film Guide
9780804776516 Paper $21.95 $17.56 sale 9780804776509 Cloth $65.00 $52.00 sale
Accident Society
Brevity may be the soul of wit, but it is also much more. In this exploration of the shortest literary workswise sayings, proverbs, witticisms, sardonic observations about human nature, pithy evocations of mystery, terse statements regarding ultimate questionsGary Saul Morson argues passionately for the importance of these short genres not only to scholars but also to general readers. We are fascinated by how brief works evoke a powerful sense of life in a few words, which is why we browse quotation anthologies and love to repeat our favorites. Arguing that all short genres are short in their own way, Morson explores the unique form of brevity that each of them develops. Apothegms (Heraclitus, Lao Tzu, Wittgenstein) describe the universe as ultimately unknowable, offering not answers but ever deeper questions. Dicta (Spinoza, Marx, Freud) create the sense that unsolvable enigmas have at last been resolved. Sayings from sages and sacred texts assure us that goodness is rewarded, while sardonic maxims (Ecclesiastes, Nietzsche, George Eliot) uncover the self-deceptions behind such comforting illusions. Just as witticisms display the power of mind, witlessisms (William Spooner, Dan Quayle, the persona assumed by Mark Twain) astonish with their spectacular stupidity.
A passionate, imaginative book, full of energy and wisdom. The Long and Short of It is an exciting, horizon-opening essay on literary short forms that provide an interface between literature and philosophy.
Thomas Pavel, University of Chicago
This book argues that language and literature actively produced chance in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by categorizing injuries and losses as innocent of design. Automobile collisions and occupational injuries became car accidents and industrial accidents. During the post-Civil War period of racial, ethnic, and class-based hostility, chance was an abstract enemy against which society might unite. Accident Society reveals the extent to which American collectivity has dependedand continues to dependon the literary production of chance. The intellectual range of this book is staggering. each chapter not only shifts the discourse about a particular literary text, finding hidden illuminations, but also radiates new possibilities for understanding the social, philosophical, and political coordinates that situate the texts. It is truly a brilliant book.
Eric Wertheimer, Arizona State University
288 pp., 2012 9780804781695 Paper $24.95 $19.96 sale 9780804780513 Cloth $80.00 $64.00 sale
Julian Bell
Benjamin Widiss Julian Bell explores the life of a younger member, and sole poet, Literary studies in the postwar of the Bloomsbury Group, the era have consistently barred most important community of attributing specific intentions British writers and intellectuals to authors based on textual in the twentieth century, which evidence or ascribing textual includes Virginia Woolf (Julians presences to the authors themaunt), E. M. Forster, the econoselves. Obscure Invitations argues mist John Maynard Keynes, and that this taboo has blinded us the art critic Roger Fry. This to fundamental elements of biography draws upon the extwentieth-century literature. panding archives on BloomsWidiss focuses on the particubury to present Julians life more larly self-conscious constructions completely and more personally of authorship that characterize than has been done previously. modernist and postmodernist It is an intense and profound writing, elaborating the narraexploration of personal, sexual, tive strategies they demand and intellectual, political, and literary the reading practices they yield. life in England between the two Obscure Invitations will be world wars. Through Julian, the book provides important insights recognized as a significant intervention in American literary on Virginia Woolf, his mother Vanessa Bell, and other members studies. each of the readings it contains is a tour de force: well of the Bloomsbury Group. researched, elegantly written, An intergenerational conversaand powerfully persuasive. tion, between the younger and Loren Glass, the older Peter Stansky, as well as University of Iowa between Julian bell and his elders An important new assessment of in the bloomsbury Group. A new the place of the author in twentiJulian bell emerges [in this] beau- eth-century American narrative. tiful, tragic book. Mark Maslan,
Peter Mandler, University of Cambridge University of California at Santa Barbara
Obscure Invitations
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Now in Paperback
Our Conrad
Robinson Jeffers and the American Sublime is the most comprehensive and most substantial critical work ever devoted to the major American poet Robinson Jeffers (18871962). Jeffers, the best known poet of California and the American West, particularly valorized the Big Sur region, making it his own as Frost did New England and Faulkner, Mississippi, and connecting it to the wider tradition of the American sublime in Emerson, Thoreau, and John Muir. The book also links Jeffers to a Puritan sublime in early American verse and explores his response to the Darwinian and Freudian revolutions and his engagement with modern astronomy. This book sets out to be the fullest and most detailed explication of Jeffers large body of poetry and his literary career, and it delivers on that ambition. It is the best single critical book about Jeffers and sets a benchmark that will be difficult to meet, let alone surpass.
Albert Gelpi, Emeritus, Stanford University
Our Conrad is one the most stimulating works of scholarship I have read in some time. [It] will be embraced by scholars in english and American literature and American history, as well as readers outside academia who want to understand the connection of America with the rest of the world during the early twentieth century.
Fred Hobson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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11
J ewi S h h i Stor y
a nd
C ult ur e
S tanford S tu die S
Sephardism
in
Through comparative readings of narratives by Reb Nakhman of Breslov, Amos Tutuola, Yisroel Aksenfeld, Cheikh Hamidou Kane, Isaac Meyer Dik, among others, Caplan demonstrates that these literatures belated relationship to modernization suggests their potential to anticipate subsequent crises in the modernity and post-modernity of metropolitan cultures. A masterpiece in comparative literature that will quickly establish itself as a classic in both Yiddish and African literary studies. 360 pp., 2011
Sanctuary in the Wilderness is a critical introduction to American Hebrew poetry, focusing on a dozen key poets. This secular poetry began with a preoccupation with the situation of the individual in a disenchanted world and then moved outward to engage American vistas and Jewish fate and hope in midcentury. American Hebrew poets hoped to be read in both Palestine and America, but were disap- This book offers a fresh and creative take on the ways that pointed on both scores. Several modern authors have imagined moved to Israel and connected with the vital literary scene there, Sephardic Jews or employed the trope of Sepharad in order to but most stayed and persisted in the cause of American Hebraism. advance various political, moral, or literary projects. This fascinating literary study Julia Phillips Cohen, of twelve Hebrew poets who Vanderbilt University flourished as a virtual community A tour de force in the study of in America about the middle of Jews as other in the modern litthe twentieth century revises erary consciousness....An imporand expands our understanding tant addition to every library. of poetry, modernism, Hebrew, Sander L. Gilman, and, not least, America. It inEmory University vites us to wonder when and 376 pp., 1 figure, 2012 9780804777469 Cloth $45.00 $36.00 sale under what conditions such an island of Hebrew creativity might surface here again.
544 pp., 8 illustrations, 2011 9780804762939 Cloth $65.00 $52.00 sale
Ruth Wisse, Harvard University
Arguing that the Sephardic experience played a much more vital role in the development of modern nationalism and literary history than has been generally acknowledged, this book demonstrates how modern writers from Europe, the Americas, North Africa, Israel, and India have used Sephardic history to explore the role and status of minorities and dissidents.
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This book explores the uniquely Jewish space created by Jewish authors working within the limitations of the Soviet cultural system. It situates Russian- and Yiddish- language authors in the same literary universeone in which modernism, revolution, socialist realism, violence, and catastrophe join traditional Jewish texts to provide the framework for literary creativity. These writers represented, attacked, reformed, and mourned Jewish life in the pre-revolutionary shtetl as they created new forms of Jewish culture. This pioneering book offers an illuminating interpretation of Soviet Jewish culture, treating this complex phenomenon from a refreshingly new literary perspective. It is the first literary study to cover the entire Soviet period and deal equally expertly with Yiddish and Russian texts.
Mikhail Krutikov, University of Michigan
Edited by Aron Rodrigue and Sarah Abrevaya Stein Translation, Transliteration, and Glossary by Isaac Jerusalmi
This book presents for the first time the complete text of the earliest known Ladino-language memoir, transliterated from the original script, translated into English, and introduced and explicated by the editors. The memoirist, Saadi Besalel a-Levi (18201903), wrote about Ottoman Jews daily life at a time when the long-ascendant fabric of Ottoman society was just beginning to unravel. His vivid portrayal of life in Salonica, a major port in the Ottoman Levant with a majorityJewish population, thus provides a unique window into a way of life before it disappeared as a result of profound political and social changes and the World Wars. This precious historical source is a gripping read and will advance the scholarly agenda of Sephardic studies.
432 pp., 1 illustration, 3 maps, 2012 9780804771665 Cloth $50.00 $40.00 sale
Francesca Trivellato, Yale University
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Across Meridians
History and Figuration in Karen Tei Yamashitas Alisa Freedman Transnational Novels 352 pp., 16 figures, 3 illustrations, 2 maps, 2010
Jinqi Ling
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Tokyo in Transit
Over the course of the last two decades, novelist Karen Tei Yamashita has reshaped the Asian American literary imagination in profound ways. In Across Meridians, Jinqi Ling offers readers the most critically engaged examination to date of Yamashitas literary corpus. Crafted at the intersection of intellectual history, ethnic studies, literary analysis, and critical theory, Lings study goes beyond textual investigation to intervene in larger debates over postmodern representation, spatial materialism, historical form, and social and academic activism. With this intellectually rigorous, original study of the complete fictional oeuvre of Karen Tei Yamashita, Jinqi ling produces the first book-length treatment of a novelist whose audacious, ingenious visions of the Americas and of the contemporary crisscrossed globe have awaited just such rich, sustained attention.
Asian America
Caroline Rody, University of Virginia
Ordering
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The Semblance of Identity makes an impressive contribution to Asian American studies by providing a fresh look at the fields uneasy relationship with the identity politics from which it was born. lee offers an elegant, theoretically sophisticated picture of what post-identity Asian American studies might look like.
Asian America
Timothy Yu, University of Wisconsin-Madison
14
Straitjacket Sexualities
On Uneven Ground
The history of literary and artisReading Colonial Japan is a tic production in modern Japan unique anthology that aims to has typically centered on the deepen knowledge of Japanese literature and art of Tokyo, yet colonialism(s) by providing an cultural activity in the countrys eclectic selection of translated regional cities and rural towns Japanese primary sources and was no less vibrant. On Uneven analytical essays that illumiGround recovers pieces of this nate Japans many and varied neglected history through the figure of Miyazawa Kenji (1896- colonial projects. The primary documents highlight how 1933). While alive, he remained central cultural production a mostly unknown and unread and dissemination were to the provincial author whose excolonial effort, while accentuatperiments with narrative fiction, amateur theater, and farmers art ing the myriad ways colonialism permeated every facet of life. reveal an intense determination to reimagine and remake his A splendid collection of conative place, in the northeast of lonial writings in translation, Japan, meaningful. paired with critical essays that address historical and Provides fresh insight into Mitheoretical concerns in original yazawa Kenjis oeuvre, as well and engaging ways. It is an as the complex relationship between the institutions of cultural exceptional achievement and a truly important addition to (re)production and the literary cultural studies, Asian studproduct, thereby destabilizing ies, history, and the study of persistent notions of a singular, colonialism/postcolonialism, monolithic national Japanese migration, and translation. literature.
Edward Mack, University of Washington
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The greatest novelty to emerge from The Kingdom and the Glory is that modern power is not only government but also glory, and that the ceremonial, liturgical, and acclamatory aspects that Presents new biographical we have regarded as vestiges of material about Agamben, while the past actually constitute the providing a novel and lucid interbasis of Western power. With pretation of his work that focuses this book, the work begun with on its capacity for imagining new Homo Sacer reaches a decisive forms of life and transforming point, profoundly challengour ethical, political, and philoing and renewing our vision of Thanks to its clear analyses and its sophical thought and practice. politics. Matthew Calarco, multiple avenues of inquiry, this Meridian: Crossing Aesthetics California State University, Fullerton essay points the way to a new 328 pp., 2011 144 pp., 2012 democratic lucidity. 9780804760164 Paper $24.95 $19.96 sale
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16
Philosophy
Dawn
Releasing the Image understands images as something beyond mere representations of things. Releasing images from that function, it shows them to be self-referential and self-generative, and in this way capable of producing forms of engagement beyond spectatorship and subjectivity. The essays included here cover historical periods from the Romantic era to the present and address a range of topics, from Czannes painting, to images in poetry, to contemporary audiovisual art. They reveal the aesthetic, ethical, and political stakes of the project of releasing images and provoke new ways of engaging with embodiment, agency, history, and technology. A stunning collection of essays by leading philosophers and media theorists who break with notions of the image as frozen or static, and refocus the debate around topics of embodiment, agency, virtuality and temporality.
Tim Lenoir, Duke University
The first volume under the general editorship of Alan D. Schrift and Duncan large, Dawn represents a huge leap forward. We can finally look forward to the completion of this nineteen-volume series, which will be invaluable not only to specialists but also to students and anyone interested in this remarkable thinker.
Alexander Nehamas, Princeton University
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456 pp., 2011 9780804780056 Paper $21.95 $17.56 sale 9780804728768 Cloth $65.00 $52.00 sale
Philosophy
17
PostPostmodernism
Jeffrey T. Nealon
Post-Postmodernism begins with a simple premise: we no longer live in the world of postmodernism, famously dubbed the cultural logic of late capitalism by Fredric Jameson in 1984. Far from charting any simple move beyond postmodernism since the 1980s, though, this book argues that weve experienced an intensification of postmodern capitalism over the past decades, an increasing saturation of the economic sphere into formerly independent segments of everyday cultural life. If fragmentation was the preferred watchword of postmodern America, intensification is the dominant cultural logic of our contemporary era. Post-Postmodernism surveys a wide variety of cultural texts in pursuing its analyseseverything from the classic rock of Black Sabbath to the post-Marxism of Antonio Negri, from considerations of the corporate university to the fare at the cineplex, from reading experimental literature to gambling in Las Vegas, from Badiou to the undergraduate classroom. Insofar as cultural realms of all kinds have increasingly been overcoded by the languages and practices of economics, Nealon aims to construct a genealogy of the American present, and to build a vocabulary for understanding the relations between economic production and cultural production today.
This is a work of very considerable importance. now perhaps more than at any other time, culture and the economy constitute a seamless whole: everything can be given its price. nealon poses the question: if postmodernism was the cultural logic of late capitalism, what is the cultural logic that has accompanied our current regime of accumulation? His answer is novel and ingenious.
Kenneth Surin, Duke University
This superb analysis of distraction and our lack of attention to it breaks significant new ground in our critical history.
David Ferris, University of Colorado at Boulder
248 pp., 2012 9780804781459 Paper $22.95 $18.36 sale 9780804781442 Cloth $80.00 $64.00 sale
18 Philosophy
Malfeasance
Testing the Limit claims that the textual origins of phenomenology determine, in their temporal rhythms, the nature of the subjectivation on which they focus. The book situates these considerations within the broader picture of the state of contemporary Pierre Saint-Amand, French phenomenology (chiefly Brown University the legacy of Merleau-Ponty), in 104 pp., 2010 order to show that these three 9780804773034 Paper $15.95 $12.76 sale 9780804773027 Cloth $40.00 $32.00 sale thinkers share a certain family resemblance, the identificanoW in PAPERBAcK tion of which reveals something about the traces of other phenomenological families. It is The Bite of Conscience by testing the limit within the context of traditional phenomHerant Katchadourian enological concerns about the Subtle, generous, and both appearance of subjectivity and informed and informative. The book assembles the most dis- ipseity that Derrida, Henry, and It also has the rare merit of tinguished experts on Arendt and Levinas radically reconsider Adorno. The mutual antipathy be- phenomenology and that French adhering to solid academic standards yet being accessible tween the two thinkers, the study phenomenology assumes its to a general literate audience reveals a surprising affinity, espepresent form. .... Highly recommended. cially with regard to the critique Cultural Memory in the Present H. Oberdiek, and rethinking of modernity. 328 pp., 2012 CHOICE Fred Dallmayr, 9780804772754 Paper $29.95 $23.96 sale 392 pp., 2009 University of Notre Dame 9780804772747 Cloth $90.00 $72.00 sale 9780804778718 Paper $24.95 $19.96 sale 384 pp., 2012
Hannah Arendt and Theodor W. Adorno, two of the most influential political philosophers and theorists of the twentieth century, were contemporaries with similar interests, backgrounds, and a shared experience of exile. Yet until now, no book has brought them together. In this first comparative study of their work, leading scholars discuss divergences, disclose surprising affinities, and find common ground between the two thinkers. This pioneering work recovers the relevance of Arendt and Adorno for contemporary political theory and philosophy and lays the foundation for a critical understanding of political modernity: from universalistic claims for political freedom to the abyss of genocidal politics.
Franois-David Sebbah
Guilt
9780804775403 Paper $24.95 $19.96 sale 9780804775397 Cloth $85.00 $68.00 sale
Philosophy
19
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