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literary production

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Journal Article
Qui Parle (2023) 32 (1): 137–161.
Published: 01 June 2023
... work novel respond to the general crisis of novel production in the twenty-first century. I would be remiss not to observe that Temporary is not entirely and unequivocally pessimistic about the status of the novel as a literary-critical register. It can see that this particular historical...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2017) 26 (2): 491–512.
Published: 01 December 2017
... of literary production for Clifton and Jordan, as part of the way they privilege the creative world their mothers produced for them. Copyright © 2018 Editorial Board, Qui Parle 2018 fury maternal retrieval black feminism It is up to me to sort out these connections—to employ anger and take...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2024) 33 (2): 363–384.
Published: 01 December 2024
.... “Conglomeration,” he writes, “led to the production of fiction that allegorized conglomeration itself” ( BF , 17). By reading novels as allegories of conglomeration, Sinykin hopes to gain a perspective wide enough to cover the breadth of contemporary literary culture, a better periodization that attends to both...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2000) 12 (1): 77–103.
Published: 01 June 2000
... poetics of Emerson ian transcendentalism that such anti-representationalism enters the tra- dition of American pragmatism. In his attempt to overcome the rhe- torical inertia of an essentially mimetic theory of literature, Emerson develops a theory of literary production based upon the same...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2014) 22 (2): 101–122.
Published: 01 December 2014
... production of literary works, reviews, and journals, to a greater number of authors, publishing houses, and booksellers, as well as lending libraries and reading rooms, above all through reading societies, all as points of social junc- tion in a new reading culture. . . . The French...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2013) 21 (2): 193–212.
Published: 01 December 2013
..., and Marxism spring to mind— seek to derive value from fact in order to confi rm that literary production and reception is fi rmly embedded in a world that is more or less shared and accessible. Terada’s worry is that the “enormous pull” (LA, 12) of this democratic impulse “tends to make acceptance count...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2023) 32 (1): 1–39.
Published: 01 June 2023
...—in this case the Logic more so than the Phenomenology . Her article, “Literature and Totality: Kritik durch Darstellung and the Crisis of Literary Production in the Twenty-First-Century Gig Work Novel,” grounds an account of the critical purchase of totality for literary criticism within the larger...
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Journal Article
Qui Parle (2012) 20 (2): 249–278.
Published: 01 December 2012
... of a Somali spear. For Borges, Burton’s voluminous literary production (transla- tions, travel accounts) is not the least of his excesses. Commenting on his still standard translation of The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Borges writes: “The problems that Burton resolved...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 20 (1): 179–204.
Published: 01 June 2011
...—and thus ephemeral. The master term “rescue” (sauvetage), the call to “rescue” liter- ature and the humanities, obscures the question of our relation to time, the question of how we are to teach students to relate to past literary production. What we currently emphasize...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2022) 31 (2): 159–188.
Published: 01 December 2022
...” for interpreting and representing human history and existence (at the level of both the individual and the collective) as open, revisable, and undetermined by any order extrinsic to the workings of human “mind” and “intention.” The advent of this method within literary production constituted, for Said, a “severe...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2022) 31 (2): 189–229.
Published: 01 December 2022
... at colonial passage points ( Z , 10), and lubricating the narration of the story itself ( Z , 23). Through this motif, Matalon evokes the material preconditions and the economic effects of visual reading, colonial travel, and literary production and links together all three. She further underscores...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2001) 12 (2): 1–14.
Published: 01 December 2001
... there ever been a more obvi- ous premise for misrecognition? In the hoary old tradition of the new, as with its high modernist exemplars, generational misrecognition is one of the guarantees of literary value, a prop and mainstay of the system of cultural production and reception...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2001) 12 (2): 57–105.
Published: 01 December 2001
... to the field." Again, Bourdieu: When a new literary or artistic group makes its presence felt in the field of literary or artistic production, the whole problem is transformed, since its coming into being, i.e. into difference, modifies and displaces...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 20 (1): 79–92.
Published: 01 June 2011
... or negligible margins—of contemporary apparatuses of capital production.”13 Beyond the necessarily provocative (because it itself responds to a provocation) character of this assertion, the ambition—the real ambition—of this book is to reestablish literary studies, in this case principally studies...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2014) 23 (1): 213–238.
Published: 01 June 2014
...? In literature or in art history, style usually exercises a personological, identifying, and signifying function, sorting exceptional works from unimpressive or minor ones. Style is the hallmark of a habit that refers to an average level of language use or of art production, and personifi es the genius...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 20 (1): 153–167.
Published: 01 June 2011
... knowledge, one of the incontrovertible sources of learning and pleasure? Who, after all, can be against the production and reception of literary texts? But one wouldn’t know this to be the case from the current dis- Perloff: The Decay of a Discipline 157...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 19 (2): 5–21.
Published: 01 December 2011
..., pervasive terror, hys- terical politics, ecological disaster. Has crisis become the defi ning mood of the twenty-fi rst century? Or is this cultural anxiety the ex- aggerated production of an overactive media in an age of around- the-clock transmissions? Crisis has long been the defi ning catalyst...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2017) 26 (1): 231–246.
Published: 01 June 2017
... than not taken as pejoratives in academic discourse, particularly in theory cultures. As Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Humanities and English at Brown University, Amanda Anderson is sharply aware that the affiliation liberal in literary studies and the humanities can today be as risky a critical...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2016) 25 (1-2): 243–261.
Published: 01 December 2016
...- Srinivasan: Divisions of Labor 245 cale Casanova’s world- systems- theory- inspired “literary geopolitics,” the generalist-specialist negotiation of translated literatures advocat- ed by David Damrosch, Wai Chee Dimock’s counter- Andersonian “literature for the planet,” Eric Hayot’s enumeration...
Journal Article
Qui Parle (2011) 20 (1): 57–77.
Published: 01 June 2011
... Donncha Marron puts it, “The production of consumer credit as a profi t-making enterprise within an advanced capitalist economy represents . . . the disembeddedness of transac- tions from social relations.”12 Today’s credit seeks to destroy the public and remake it in the image of a disaggregated...