Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Status | |
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American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | PN 56 .S7416 F68 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available |
PN 56 .M54 S77 1994 The birth of modernism : Ezra Pound, T.S. Eliot, W.B. Yeats and the occult / | PN 56 .P93 A23 1985 Catharsis in literature / | PN 56 .R3 A83 2003 Mimesis : the representation of reality in Western literature / | PN 56 .S7416 F68 2014 The imperative to write : destitutions of the sublime in Kafka, Blanchot, and Beckett / | PN 56.T7 E53 2020 Encountering difference : new perspectives on genre, travel and gender / | PN 56.T7 .M43 2011 Mediterranean travels : writing self and other from the ancient world to contemporary society / | PN 56 .W3 F38 2010 War at a distance : romanticism and the making of modern wartime / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- Kafka. Kafka's teeth: the literary gewissenbiss -- The ecstasy of judgment -- Embodied violence and the leap from the law: "in The penal colony" and The trial -- Degradation of the sublime: A hunger artist -- Blanchot. Pointed instants: Blanchot's exigencies -- The shell and the mask: L'arret de mort -- The dead look: The death mask, the corpse image, and the haunting of fiction -- Beckett. Beckett's voices and the paradox of expression -- Company, but not enough -- Conclusion: speech unredeemed: from the call of conscience to the torture of language.
Is writing haunted by a categorical imperative? Does the Kantian sublime continue to shape the writer's vocation, even for twentieth-century authors? What precise shape, form, or figure does this residue of sublimity take in the fictions that follow from itand that leave it in ruins? This book explores these questions through readings of three authors who bear witness to an ambiguous exigency: writing as a demanding and exclusive task, at odds with life, but also a mere compulsion, a drive without end or reason, even a kind of torture. If Kafka, Blanchot, and Beckett mimic a sublime vocation i.
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