The Monster as War Machine

Author:   Mabel Moraña
Publisher:   Cambria Press
ISBN:  

9781604979862


Pages:   554
Publication Date:   08 January 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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The Monster as War Machine


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Overview

In The Monster as War Machine, European monster tradition intersects with American mass-media production and new philosophical approaches to examine topics of community, political power, alternative representations of race and gender, identity, hybridity, political agency, and collective subjectivity. In this book, cultural theory, close readings of literary texts, and interpretations of visual materials come together, covering a wide and diversified cultural territory. Some of the authors included in this study are Agamben, Badiou, Baudrillard, Deleuze, Esposito, Foucault, Freud, Haraway, Hardt, Kristeva, Marx, Negri, and Zizek, whose works illuminate the disruptive and at times emancipatory role of monstrosity as a representation of excess, instinct, evil, truth, and rebelliousness. This book is an important resource for those studying film, contemporary literature, and popular culture. This book is in the Cambria Latin American Literatures and Cultures Series headed by Román de la Campa, the Edwin B. and Lenore R. Williams Professor of Romance Languages at the University of Pennsylvania.

Full Product Details

Author:   Mabel Moraña
Publisher:   Cambria Press
Imprint:   Cambria Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.980kg
ISBN:  

9781604979862


ISBN 10:   1604979860
Pages:   554
Publication Date:   08 January 2018
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

The Monster as War Machine is a far-ranging, audacious, erudite, and exquisitely written examination of monsters and the monstrous. It spans the broad sweep of history, from the Classical and Medieval Periods to the present. It moves deftly between Europe and North America, on the one hand and Latin America, on the other, both in terms of its subject matter and the authors it considers. It bridges the divide between canonical literature and popular forms of expression. It brings together philosophy, literature, history, and anthropology, deftly combining insightful textual analysis and an almost surprising range of theories, to demonstrate how central monsters are and always have been to our social and political lives, to our thought, and to our literature and cinema, manifesting themselves in similar yet different ways across time and space. Mabel Mora�a achieves this immense feat through lucid yet vivid prose that thoughtfully weaves a series of what at first glance might appear to be divergent and scattered theories, into a set of intense and thought-provoking constellations of ideas and experiences. --Joanne Rappaport, Professor of Spanish, Georgetown University; and President of the Latin American Studies Association (LASA), 2016-2017 The Monster As War Machine is a tour de force on the significance and widespread presence of the figure of the monsters in Latin American literature, popular art, and digital communication. In a broad and thorough survey of recent Euro-American theory that deals with questions of difference and 'monstrosity, ' as originally posited by Deleuze and Guattari in their influential A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia (1987), Mabel Mora�a identifies and analyzes multiple appearances of monsters from Dracula to pishtacos and cyborgs in order to examine them as signs of a profound crisis in the epistemes of violence and war that harbor them. This study is very rich in trenchant analysis of cultural moments in both Latin America and the United States and thus constitutes an indispensable resource for anyone interested in the issues raised by difference as well as nomadism. In treating the figure of the monsters as a 'cognitive model, ' Professor Morana develops the monster as the lynchpin at the crossroads of politics, religion and art. With its wide reach, this book is an essential starting point for future scholarship on the topic. --Sara Castro-Klaren, Professor of Spanish, Johns Hopkins University


The Monster as War Machine is a far-ranging, audacious, erudite, and exquisitely written examination of monsters and the monstrous. It spans the broad sweep of history, from the Classical and Medieval Periods to the present. It moves deftly between Europe and North America, on the one hand and Latin America, on the other, both in terms of its subject matter and the authors it considers. It bridges the divide between canonical literature and popular forms of expression. It brings together philosophy, literature, history, and anthropology, deftly combining insightful textual analysis and an almost surprising range of theories, to demonstrate how central monsters are and always have been to our social and political lives, to our thought, and to our literature and cinema, manifesting themselves in similar yet different ways across time and space. Mabel Mora a achieves this immense feat through lucid yet vivid prose that thoughtfully weaves a series of what at first glance might appear to be divergent and scattered theories, into a set of intense and thought-provoking constellations of ideas and experiences. --Joanne Rappaport, Professor of Spanish, Georgetown University; and President of the Latin American Studies Association (LASA), 2016-2017 The Monster As War Machine is a tour de force on the significance and widespread presence of the figure of the monsters in Latin American literature, popular art, and digital communication. In a broad and thorough survey of recent Euro-American theory that deals with questions of difference and 'monstrosity, ' as originally posited by Deleuze and Guattari in their influential A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia (1987), Mabel Mora a identifies and analyzes multiple appearances of monsters from Dracula to pishtacos and cyborgs in order to examine them as signs of a profound crisis in the epistemes of violence and war that harbor them. This study is very rich in trenchant analysis of cultural moments in both Latin America and the United States and thus constitutes an indispensable resource for anyone interested in the issues raised by difference as well as nomadism. In treating the figure of the monsters as a 'cognitive model, ' Professor Morana develops the monster as the lynchpin at the crossroads of politics, religion and art. With its wide reach, this book is an essential starting point for future scholarship on the topic. --Sara Castro-Klaren, Professor of Spanish, Johns Hopkins University


"""The Monster as War Machine is a far-ranging, audacious, erudite, and exquisitely written examination of monsters and the monstrous. It spans the broad sweep of history, from the Classical and Medieval Periods to the present. It moves deftly between Europe and North America, on the one hand and Latin America, on the other, both in terms of its subject matter and the authors it considers. It bridges the divide between canonical literature and popular forms of expression. It brings together philosophy, literature, history, and anthropology, deftly combining insightful textual analysis and an almost surprising range of theories, to demonstrate how central monsters are and always have been to our social and political lives, to our thought, and to our literature and cinema, manifesting themselves in similar yet different ways across time and space. Mabel Mora�a achieves this immense feat through lucid yet vivid prose that thoughtfully weaves a series of what at first glance might appear to be divergent and scattered theories, into a set of intense and thought-provoking constellations of ideas and experiences."" --Joanne Rappaport, Professor of Spanish, Georgetown University; and President of the Latin American Studies Association (LASA), 2016-2017 ""The Monster As War Machine is a tour de force on the significance and widespread presence of the figure of the monsters in Latin American literature, popular art, and digital communication. In a broad and thorough survey of recent Euro-American theory that deals with questions of difference and 'monstrosity, ' as originally posited by Deleuze and Guattari in their influential A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia (1987), Mabel Mora�a identifies and analyzes multiple appearances of monsters from Dracula to pishtacos and cyborgs in order to examine them as signs of a profound crisis in the epistemes of violence and war that harbor them. This study is very rich in trenchant analysis of cultural moments in both Latin America and the United States and thus constitutes an indispensable resource for anyone interested in the issues raised by difference as well as nomadism. In treating the figure of the monsters as a 'cognitive model, ' Professor Morana develops the monster as the lynchpin at the crossroads of politics, religion and art. With its wide reach, this book is an essential starting point for future scholarship on the topic."" --Sara Castro-Klaren, Professor of Spanish, Johns Hopkins University"


Author Information

Mabel Moraña is the William H. Gass Professor in Arts and Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis. In addition to more than forty edited volumes, Dr. Moraña has published thirteen books, including Arguedas / Vargas Llosa: Dilemas y ensamblajes, which won the 2013 MLA Katherine Singer Kovacs Prize.

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