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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Christian HainesPublisher: Fordham University Press Imprint: Fordham University Press ISBN: 9780823286959ISBN 10: 0823286959 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 01 October 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction: Impossibly American | 1 1. A Revolutionary Haunt: Utopian Frontiers in William S. Burroughs's Late Trilogy | 33 2. The People and the People: Democracy and Vitalism in Walt Whitman's 1855 Leaves of Grass | 74 3. Nobody's Wife: Affective Economies of Marriage in Emily Dickinson | 114 4. Idle Power: The Riot, the Commune, and Capitalist Time in Thomas Pynchon's Against the Day | 157 Coda: Assembling the Future | 205 Acknowledgments | 209 Notes | 213 Index | 241ReviewsHaines' book is guided by a remarkable ambition. Drawing on a large archive of recent debates, and discussing authors as diverse as Emily Dickinson and Thomas Pynchon, it unearths a novel understanding of what bio-politics might mean. In so doing it formulates original readings of a series of canonical American texts with special attention to what the denominator America might mean in them. In Haines' reading, America appears as neither national nor transnational, neither exceptional nor globalized, but as singular. Treating singularity as a rigorous philosophical concept Haines introduces us into unexpected encounters with texts and words we thought we already understood so well. -- Branka Arsic, Columbia University Drawing together autonomist and post-autonomist Marxism, theories of the biopolitical, and the long genealogy of critiques of exceptionalism, A Desire Called America imagines a bold new way forward for American Studies. Instead of the endlessly receding work of critique, in which each critical excoriation of exceptionalism is, in turn, interrogated for being insufficiently negative by the next, Christian Haines makes a bold turn to the positive, studying key texts of the national canon in order to see the surplus of radical political desire and biopolitical possibility that resist and form in contradiction with the discourse of exceptionalism. -- Christopher Breu Drawing together autonomist and post-autonomist Marxism, theories of the biopolitical, and the long genealogy of critiques of exceptionalism, A Desire Called America imagines a bold new way forward for American Studies. Instead of the endlessly receding work of critique, in which each critical excoriation of exceptionalism is, in turn, interrogated for being insufficiently negative by the next, Christian Haines makes a bold turn to the positive, studying key texts of the national canon in order to see the surplus of radical political desire and biopolitical possibility that resist and form in contradiction with the discourse of exceptionalism. -- Christopher Breu In this well-crafted, expertly researched... study, Haines finds the nexus of biopolitics, utopian desires, and literary critique called America... Highly recommended. * Choice * Haines' book is guided by a remarkable ambition. Drawing on a large archive of recent debates, and discussing authors as diverse as Emily Dickinson and Thomas Pynchon, it unearths a novel understanding of what bio-politics might mean. In so doing it formulates original readings of a series of canonical American texts with special attention to what the denominator America might mean in them. In Haines' reading, America appears as neither national nor transnational, neither exceptional nor globalized, but as singular. Treating singularity as a rigorous philosophical concept Haines introduces us into unexpected encounters with texts and words we thought we already understood so well. -- Branka Arsic, Columbia University Drawing together autonomist and post-autonomist Marxism, theories of the biopolitical, and the long genealogy of critiques of exceptionalism, A Desire Called America imagines a bold new way forward for American Studies. Instead of the endlessly receding work of critique, in which each critical excoriation of exceptionalism is, in turn, interrogated for being insufficiently negative by the next, Christian Haines makes a bold turn to the positive, studying key texts of the national canon in order to see the surplus of radical political desire and biopolitical possibility that resist and form in contradiction with the discourse of exceptionalism. -- Christopher Breu Author InformationChristian P. Haines is Assistant Professor of English at Penn State University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |