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OverviewSince the events of September 11th the problems of loss, mourning and commemoration have preoccupied our culture. Ours is not a culture in mourning so much as a mourning culture. Mourning, and its ethical and communal implications, therefore, are central to an understanding of contemporary western culture and its development in the new millennium. On Mourning confronts the issue of loss and its commemoration in contemporary writing. Bringing together work from literary studies, anthropology, psychoanalysis, cultural theory and contemporary philosophy, William Watkin offers an overview of the process of mourning in our culture that is both wide-reaching and challenging. He provides illuminating readings of contemporary writing practices, showing how our 'mourning culture' is manifested in traditional elegies, contemporary novels, personal narratives, emotional speech and political rhetoric. In particular, Watkin considers the central issues of emotional authenticity, the relationship between commemorative art and the dead body, the psychological impact of loss and our communal responses to the 'otherness' of death. Overall, the book not only explores the aesthetics of loss in specific written, spoken and visual examples, it also puts forward a theory of the ethics of mourning both for individual subjects and communities as a whole. Such a radical reappraisal of the importance of loss and of art will have major implications for literary and cultural studies for years to come.Key Features* Wide-ranging critical introduction to mourning in modern culture* Covers a variety of modern literary and non-literary texts * Thorough re-consideration of the emotional and subjective effects of loss on our modern age* Introduces readers to the new and developing field of postmodern ethics Full Product DetailsAuthor: William Watkin (Lecturer in Literature, Brunel University)Publisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.518kg ISBN: 9780748618781ISBN 10: 0748618783 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 28 February 2004 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of Contents; Contents Page; Introduction; Deathart and the Poetics of Mourning; Chapter One; Emotional Authenticity: Durkheim, Geertz and Modern Mourning Rituals; Chapter Two:; Poppypetal: Elegy and Consolation; Chapter Three:; the line that does not lie down: enjambment, the tomb and the body; Chapter Four; What Remains: Julia Kristeva and the Matter of Mourning; Chapter Five:; In the Dead's Place: Theories of the Lost Object in the work of Lacan and Freud; Chapter Six:; The Environment of Loss: Klein, Bowlby and Object Relations Theory; Chapter Seven:; Facing It: Contemporary Ethical Theory and Mourning; Conclusion:; One September, An Essay on Singularity.ReviewsA timely, wide-ranging, nimbly cross-disciplinary study of a subject that is of compelling interest!the strength of this book is its fertile, far-ranging, theoretically rich treatment of the central questions of grief and mourning in contemporary culture. -- Jahan Ramazani, Department of English Literature, University of Virginia A timely, wide-ranging, nimbly cross-disciplinary study of a subject that is of compelling interest!the strength of this book is its fertile, far-ranging, theoretically rich treatment of the central questions of grief and mourning in contemporary culture. Author InformationDr William Watkin is Lecturer in Literature at Brunel University, West London. He is author of In the Process of Poetry: The New York School (Bucknell UP, 2001) along with numerous articles in the fields of contemporary poetry, literary theory and the avant-garde. He is currently working on his third book, a critical, theoretical overview of postmodern poetry. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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