|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Stathis GourgourisPublisher: Stanford University Press Imprint: Stanford University Press ISBN: 9781503630635ISBN 10: 1503630633 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 14 September 2021 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 ContentsContents and Abstracts1The Nation's Dream-Work chapter abstract 2The Formal Imagination, I: The Back Roads of Developmentfrom Enlightenment to Bureaucracy chapter abstract 3The Formal Imagination, II: Natural History and NationalPedagogy—The Case of Korais chapter abstract 4The Punishment of Philhellenism chapter abstract 5The Phantasms of Writing, I: Makriyiannis and the Miraclesof National Memory chapter abstract 6The Phantasms of Writing, II: Nostalgia for Utopia—the Idolatries of Seferis chapter abstract 7Homologia/Apologia: The Writing of National History chapter abstractReviews[A] general audience, too, can benefit from Gourgouris's revisions of accepted theory, especially his questioning of the way in which the Greek Enlightenment created the first phase of a new national identity.Despite Gourgouris's claim that he merely raises questions instead of forging conclusions, readers will find that many conclusions are indeed offered, and furthermore that the Enlightenment is employed to reach both backwards and forwards in Greece's imaginative history in a way that might even suggest a postmodern sort of linearity. - Times Literary Supplement Crafting a story of nationalism that moves further than the linear logic of capital, Gourgouris studies the dream of Greece as part of the productive forces that operated in its making. Dream Nationmakes a powerful contribution to the theory of nationalism: it guides us down a fresh avenue of thinking, beyond the sociology of imagined communities.' - Radical Philosophy We dream ourselves a nation. It is aconspiracythat perdures, and which hardens and constricts our global imagination. Thishalluci-nation is what Stathis Gourgouris dismantles with poeticprecision and unabated urgency, over a prodigious range of fantastic elaborations and retroactive projections, urging us, finally, to develop an ear better attuned to the sounds of history. -Gil Anidjar, author ofSemites: Race, Religion, Literature This is an original and important study of nation formation as social imaginary signification, raising theoretical and political questions of collective identity, ethnicity, autonomy, culture, and tradition in the modern world. Adopting insights from a variety of disciplines (literary criticism, cultural studies, psychoanalysis, philosophy, economics) and drawing on material from different genres, the author approaches his topic in a synthetic way that allows for a multiplicity of perspectives and a wealth of data. A wonderful sense of adventure permeates this book, which offers a model for the study of national identities. -Vassilis Lambropoulos, author of The Rise of Eurocentrism: Anatomy of Interpretation By meticulously working through the Neohellenic nationalist fantasy as an interminable process of becoming universal in a particular way, bound up with European Philhellenism's 'colonization of the ideal,' Dream Nation brilliantly performs the necessary paradox of theorizing in the crucible of history. A quarter of a century after its initial publication, the demands that Gourgouris's critical mythography makes on the reader at the entangled site of 'Greece,' 'modernity,' and 'nation' are newly urgent. -Brooke Holmes, author of The Symptom and the Subject: The Emergence of the Physical Body in Ancient Greece Author InformationStathis Gourgouris is Professor of Comparative Literature and Society at Columbia University. He is the author of Does Literature Think? Literature as Theory for an Antimythical Era (Stanford, 2003); Lessons in Secular Criticism (2013); and The Perils of the One (2019), among other books. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |