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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jacques Khalip , Forest PylePublisher: Fordham University Press Imprint: Fordham University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.476kg ISBN: 9780823271047ISBN 10: 0823271048 Pages: 344 Publication Date: 01 July 2016 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 Contents"1. Introduction: The Present Darkness of Romanticism Jacques Khalip and Forest Pyle 2. The History of Missed Opportunities: British Romanticism and the Emergence of the Everyday William Galperin 3. The Pathology of the Future, or the Endless Triumphs of Life Lee Edelman 4. Painting Theory: Mark Tansey's ""Derrida Queries de Man"" Marc Redfield 5. Here There Is No After (Richter's History) Sara Guyer 6. Goya's Scarcity David L. Clark 7. The Tone of Praise Peter de Bolla 8. Endymion; The Text of Undersong Simon Jarvis 9. Dancing in the Dark With Shelley Joel Faflak 10. The Pastoral Stain: Twombly Under the Trees Mary Jacobus 11. The Walter Scott Experience: Living American History after Waverley Mike Goode 12. Free Indirect Filmmaking: Jane Austen and the Renditions (On Emma Among Its Others) Ian Balfour 13. Population Aesthetics in Romantic and Post-Romantic Literature Robert Mitchell 14. Techno-magism, Coleridge's Mariner, and the Sentence Image Orrin Wang 15. Willing Suspension of Disbelief, Here, Now Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak List of Contributors Index"ReviewsThis volume invokes Walter Benjamin's notion of a constellation, in which past and present meet or pass along a two-way street, to describe the different articulated conjunctions or passing through between contemporary cultural media (art, literature, film) and romanticism that occur in these fifteen essays. The constellation that editors Jacques Khalip and Forest Pyle identify is propelled by a Benjaminian understanding of what the editors here call strange adjacencies rather than alignments of cause with effect, between romanticism and now, adjacencies that recall those that Benjamin identified in the way an image (or a constellation) might pulse with an arresting temporality. The essays themselves offer a superlative, often commanding account of how we might read romanticism now, and further, how we might recast the then and now axis that we use to do so, in our own time. The array of scholarly voices and arguments in this collection is arresting. The critical differences that emerge across the volume as each scholar takes up the invitation to write about a contemporary romanticism make clear how many constellations this volume creates for thinking about where romanticism and the contemporary might be said to occupy a shared space of writing. -- -Theresa Kelley * University of Wisconsin-Madison * What might be Romanticism now? In tackling the implications of this question, which entails thinking Romanticism less as a period designation and more as a constellation of critical paradigms, Khalip and Pyle release us from the historical time (and, just as importantly, historicization) of Romanticism to think it forward as `something evermore about to be.' If, as Paul de Man suggested nearly fifty years ago, we have experienced Romanticism `in its passing away,' the essays collected here reveal to us the contemporariness of that `passing away,' inflecting it as an interpretive act in which we have not only participated but to which we continue to contribute. Constellations of a Contemporary Romanticism will be essential reading for anyone interested in what Romanticism was, is, and will become. It fundamentally reconfigures Romanticism as `our contemporary'-as the critical alliance of the past with the present, and the present with the future-and challenges us to imagine the future inscribed in our own now. -- -Charles Mahoney * University of Connecticut-Storrs * Constellations of a Contemporary Romanticism will be essential reading for anyone interested in what Romanticism was, is, and will become. It fundamentally reconfigures Romanticism as 'our contemporary'--as the critical alliance of the past with the present, and the present with the future-- and challenges us to imagine the future inscribed in our own now. --Charles Mahoney, University of Connecticut-Storrs What might be Romanticism now? In tackling the implications of this question, which entails thinking Romanticism less as a period designation and more as a constellation of critical paradigms, Khalip and Pyle release us from the historical time (and, just as importantly, historicization) of Romanticism to think it forward as `something evermore about to be.' If, as Paul de Man suggested nearly fifty years ago, we have experienced Romanticism `in its passing away,' the essays collected here reveal to us the contemporariness of that `passing away,' inflecting it as an interpretive act in which we have not only participated but to which we continue to contribute. Constellations of a Contemporary Romanticism will be essential reading for anyone interested in what Romanticism was, is, and will become. It fundamentally reconfigures Romanticism as `our contemporary'-as the critical alliance of the past with the present, and the present with the future-and challenges us to imagine the future inscribed in our own now. -- -Charles Mahoney * University of Connecticut-Storrs * This volume invokes Walter Benjamin's notion of a constellation, in which past and present meet or pass along a two-way street, to describe the different articulated conjunctions or passing through between contemporary cultural media (art, literature, film) and romanticism that occur in these fifteen essays. The constellation that editors Jacques Khalip and Forest Pyle identify is propelled by a Benjaminian understanding of what the editors here call strange adjacencies rather than alignments of cause with effect, between romanticism and now, adjacencies that recall those that Benjamin identified in the way an image (or a constellation) might pulse with an arresting temporality. The essays themselves offer a superlative, often commanding account of how we might read romanticism now, and further, how we might recast the then and now axis that we use to do so, in our own time. The array of scholarly voices and arguments in this collection is arresting. The critical differences that emerge across the volume as each scholar takes up the invitation to write about a contemporary romanticism make clear how many constellations this volume creates for thinking about where romanticism and the contemporary might be said to occupy a shared space of writing. -- -Theresa Kelley * University of Wisconsin-Madison * What might be Romanticism now? In tackling the implications of this question, which entails thinking Romanticism less as a period designation and more as a constellation of critical paradigms, Khalip and Pyle release us from the historical time (and, just as importantly, historicization) of Romanticism to think it forward as 'something evermore about to be.' If, as Paul de Man suggested nearly fifty years ago, we have experienced Romanticism 'in its passing away,' the essays collected here reveal to us the contemporariness of that 'passing away,' inflecting it as an interpretive act in which we have not only participated but to which we continue to contribute. Constellations of a Contemporary Romanticism will be essential reading for anyone interested in what Romanticism was, is, and will become. It fundamentally reconfigures Romanticism as 'our contemporary'-as the critical alliance of the past with the present, and the present with the future-and challenges us to imagine the future inscribed in our own now.----Charles Mahoney, University of Connecticut-Storrs This volume invokes Walter Benjamin's notion of a constellation, in which past and present meet or pass along a two-way street, to describe the different articulated conjunctions or passing through between contemporary cultural media (art, literature, film) and romanticism that occur in these fifteen essays. The constellation that editors Jacques Khalip and Forest Pyle identify is propelled by a Benjaminian understanding of what the editors here call strange adjacencies rather than alignments of cause with effect, between romanticism and now, adjacencies that recall those that Benjamin identified in the way an image (or a constellation) might pulse with an arresting temporality. The essays themselves offer a superlative, often commanding account of how we might read romanticism now, and further, how we might recast the then and now axis that we use to do so, in our own time. The array of scholarly voices and arguments in this collection is arresting. The critical differences that emerge across the volume as each scholar takes up the invitation to write about a contemporary romanticism make clear how many constellations this volume creates for thinking about where romanticism and the contemporary might be said to occupy a shared space of writing.----Theresa Kelley, University of Wisconsin-Madison Author InformationJacques Khalip is Associate Professor of English at Brown University. He is the author of Anonymous Life: Romanticism and Dispossession, and co-editor of Releasing The Image: From Literature to New Media and Constellations of a Contemporary Romanticism. Forest Pyle is Professor of English at the University of Oregon and the author of Art’s Undoing: In the Wake of a Radical Aestheticism (Fordham). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |