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The geocritical legacies of Edward W. Said : spatiality, critical humanism, and comparative literature / Edited by Robert T. Tally Jr.

Contributor(s): Tally, Robert T., Jr [editor.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Geocriticism and Spatial Literary Studies.Publisher: New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan, 2015Description: xii, 230 pages ; 23 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781137489791 (hardback).Other title: Spatiality, critical humanism, and comparative literature.Subject(s): Said, Edward W. -- Criticism and interpretation | Said, Edward W. -- Influence | Geocriticism | Space in literature | Place (Philosophy) in literature | Geographical perception in literature | Geography and literature | LITERARY CRITICISM / General | LITERARY CRITICISM / European / General | LITERARY CRITICISM / Semiotics & TheoryDDC classification: 801.95092
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction: The World, the Text, and the Geocritic; Robert T. Tally Jr. 1. Said, Space, and Biopolitics: Giorgio Agamben's and D. H. Lawrence's States of Exception; Russell West-Pavlov 2. Orient Within, Orient Without: Said's "Hostipitality" towards Arnoldian Culture; Emel Tastekin, 3. Edward W. Said, the Sphere of Humanism, and the Neoliberal University; Jeffrey Hole 4. Back to Beginnings: Reading Between Aesthetics and Politics; Daniel Rosenberg Nutters 5. Revisiting Said's "Secular Criticism": Anarchism, Enabling Ethics, and Oppositional Ethics; Darwin H. Tsen and Charlie Wesley 6. Transnational Identity in Crisis: Re-reading Edward W. Said's Out of Place; Sobia Khan 7. De-Orienting Aesthetic Education; Cameron Bushnell 8. Dangerous Insight: (Not) Seeing Australian Aborigines in the Narrative of James Murrells; Kristine Kelly 9. Exilic Consciousness and Alternative Modernist Geographies in the Work of Olive Schreiner and Katherine Mansfield; Elizabeth Syrkin10. Mundus Totus Exilium Est: Reflections on the Critic in Exile; Robert T. Tally Jr.
Summary: "Edward W. Said remains one of the most important literary and cultural critics in the world. A towering figure in postcolonial studies, Said may be equally well regarded for his scholarship in comparative literature, critical theory, and intellectual history. Less well known, perhaps, is Said's immense influence on geocriticism or spatial literary studies. The Geocritical Legacies of Edward W. Said brings together a variety of essays which, each in its own way, highlight the significance of Said's work for contemporary spatial criticism. With contributions from both established literary critics and emerging scholars, this collection provides a representative sample of work being done in the wake of Said's multifaceted and enormous critical project"-- Provided by publisher.
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Non-fiction 801.95092 GEO (Browse shelf) 01 Not For Loan 045178
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791.43 FAC চলচিত্র : 801 LIT Literary theory : 801 LIT Literary theory : 801.95092 GEO The geocritical legacies of Edward W. Said : 808.042 ZEA Academic writing : 808.042 ZEP Paragraph writing : 808.0420711 ZEC College writing :

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction: The World, the Text, and the Geocritic; Robert T. Tally Jr. 1. Said, Space, and Biopolitics: Giorgio Agamben's and D. H. Lawrence's States of Exception; Russell West-Pavlov 2. Orient Within, Orient Without: Said's "Hostipitality" towards Arnoldian Culture; Emel Tastekin, 3. Edward W. Said, the Sphere of Humanism, and the Neoliberal University; Jeffrey Hole 4. Back to Beginnings: Reading Between Aesthetics and Politics; Daniel Rosenberg Nutters 5. Revisiting Said's "Secular Criticism": Anarchism, Enabling Ethics, and Oppositional Ethics; Darwin H. Tsen and Charlie Wesley 6. Transnational Identity in Crisis: Re-reading Edward W. Said's Out of Place; Sobia Khan 7. De-Orienting Aesthetic Education; Cameron Bushnell 8. Dangerous Insight: (Not) Seeing Australian Aborigines in the Narrative of James Murrells; Kristine Kelly 9. Exilic Consciousness and Alternative Modernist Geographies in the Work of Olive Schreiner and Katherine Mansfield; Elizabeth Syrkin10. Mundus Totus Exilium Est: Reflections on the Critic in Exile; Robert T. Tally Jr.

"Edward W. Said remains one of the most important literary and cultural critics in the world. A towering figure in postcolonial studies, Said may be equally well regarded for his scholarship in comparative literature, critical theory, and intellectual history. Less well known, perhaps, is Said's immense influence on geocriticism or spatial literary studies. The Geocritical Legacies of Edward W. Said brings together a variety of essays which, each in its own way, highlight the significance of Said's work for contemporary spatial criticism. With contributions from both established literary critics and emerging scholars, this collection provides a representative sample of work being done in the wake of Said's multifaceted and enormous critical project"-- Provided by publisher.

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