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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Dr. Jacob Bittner (Independent Scholar, Denmark)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic USA Weight: 0.508kg ISBN: 9781501354243ISBN 10: 1501354248 Pages: 248 Publication Date: 23 January 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Note on Text List of Abbreviations Introduction: Writerly Necessity Part 1 The Emergence of Literature as Absolute 1. Literature as Pure Writing 2. The Literary Absolute 3. The Born Poet Threshold Part 2 The Paradigm of Writerly Necessity 4. Between the Subject and Language 5. The Paradigm of Writerly Necessity 6. The Writer Who Cannot Not-Desire to Write Threshold Part 3 Literary Criticism 7. The Author (Sincerity) 8. The Death of the Author (Intransitivity) 9. The Politics of a priori Poetry Threshold Part 4 Aesthetics 10. Literature in the Age of Criticism 11. The Critic 12. To Write as an Intransitive Verb Threshold Afterthought on Literary Inoperativity Conclusion Notes Bibliography IndexReviews[It] provides a meticulous resource and sets an ambitious standard for all those who question how to think about literature. * French Studies * Jacob Bittner’s The Emergence of Literature provides a welcome and rigorous reassessment of modern literature and theory’s lost or 'unthought' unifying paradigm. ... In a field that has tended in recent years toward fragmentation and an increasing lack of communication between new schools, this is invigorating reassertion of a unifying paradigm that will serve as the basis for future dialogue on literary studies’ most significant questions. * Style * At a time when literary writings are studied primarily as manifestations of a given reality (moral needs, ecological dangers, racial problems, mental issues), Jacob Bittner's The Emergence of Literature offers a timely return to a critical tradition - running from the Schlegel brothers, Kant and Hölderlin over Heidegger and Blanchot to Barthes and Agamben - that chooses to define literature in its own terms. Taking his central cue from Lacoue-Labarthe and Nancy's L’absolu littéraire, Bittner aims for what he terms an archeology of literary theory, an understanding of the conceptual framework that made possible the idea that the true poet cannot but write poetry and that to write means to write 'intransitively', without reference to an external object. Bittner's book is by no means an easy read, but given the complex philosophical and aesthetic issues that he deals with, that in itself can only be taken as a compliment. A proper historiography of literary theory is one of the larger projects that the field of literary studies is in need of: I take this book to become a central contribution to that collective endeavor. * Jürgen Pieters, Professor of Literary Theory, Ghent University, Belgium * Bittner's work represents a genuinely original and interesting contribution both to contemporary literary-philosophical and literary-theoretical debate and to intellectual-historical accounts of the development of literary thought and practice since the Romantic era. * Ian James, Head of Department of French and Reader in Modern French Literature and Thought, University of Cambridge, UK, and author of The New French Philosophy (2012) * This book is the most thorough exploration of the 'Literary Absolute' I know – and a condensed intellectual history of continental thought in modernity. * Christian Benne, Professor of Comparative Literature, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, and editor of Nietzsche und die Lyrik : Ein Kompendium (2017), Athenäum and Orbis Litterarum * A remarkable intellectual feat, based on an in- depth knowledge of continental philosophy and modern literary theory. * Recherche littéraire/Literary Research * At a time when literary writings are studied primarily as manifestations of a given reality (moral needs, ecological dangers, racial problems, mental issues), Jacob Bittner's The Emergence of Literature offers a timely return to a critical tradition - running from the Schlegel brothers, Kant and Hoelderlin over Heidegger and Blanchot to Barthes and Agamben - that chooses to define literature in its own terms. Taking his central cue from Lacoue-Labarthe and Nancy's L'absolu litteraire, Bittner aims for what he terms an archeology of literary theory, an understanding of the conceptual framework that made possible the idea that the true poet cannot but write poetry and that to write means to write 'intransitively', without reference to an external object. Bittner's book is by no means an easy read, but given the complex philosophical and aesthetic issues that he deals with, that in itself can only be taken as a compliment. A proper historiography of literary theory is one of the larger projects that the field of literary studies is in need of: I take this book to become a central contribution to that collective endeavor. * Jurgen Pieters, Professor of Literary Theory, Ghent University, Belgium * Author InformationJacob Bittner is an independent scholar who earned his PhD in critical theory at King’s College London, UK. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |