Description |
1 online resource (ix, 218 pages) |
Series |
Textxet: Studies In Comparative Literature ; volume 86 |
|
Text (Rodopi (Firm)) ; 86.
|
Contents |
Intro -- Policing Literary Theory -- Copyright -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- Editors' Introduction -- Part 1: Theories of Policing in Literature and Literary Criticism -- 1 After Theory: Politics against the Police? -- 2 Theory Policing Reading or the Critic as Cop: Revisiting Said's The World, the Text, and the Critic -- 3 Le cercle carré: On Spying and Reading -- Part 2: Case Studies -- 4 Dear Leader! Big Brother!: On Transparency and Emotional Policing -- 5 The Charisma of Theory -- 6 Within or beyond Policing Norms: Yuri Lotman's Theory of Theatricality -- 7 The Oppressive and the Subversive Sides of Theoretical Discourse -- Part 3: Policing Literary Theory across the World -- 8 Roman Nikolayevich Kim and the Strange Plots of His Mystery Novellas -- 9 Kafka, Snowden, and the Surveillance State -- 10 The Genetics of Morality: Policing Science in Dudintsev's White Robes -- 11 In Lieu of a Conclusion: Policing as a Form of Epistemology -- Three Narratives of the Japanese Empire -- Index of Subjects -- Index of Names |
Summary |
The present age of omnipresent terrorism is also an era of ever-expanding policing. What is the meaning -- and the consequences -- of this situation for literature and literary criticism? Policing Literary Theory attempts to answer these questions presenting intriguing and critical analyses of the interplays between police/policing and literature/literary criticism in a variety of linguistic milieus and literary traditions: American, English, French, German, Japanese, Korean, Russian, and others. The volume explores the mechanisms of formulation of knowledge about literature, theory, or culture in general in the post-Foucauldian surveillance society. Topics include North Korean dictatorship, spy narratives, censorship in literature and scholarship, Russian and Soviet authoritarianism, Eastern European cultures during communism, and Kafka's work. Contributors: Vladimir Biti, Reingard Nethersole, Călin-Andrei Mihăilescu, Sowon Park, Marko Juvan, Kyohei Norimatsu, Péter Hajdu, Norio Sakanaka, John Zilcosky, Yvonne Howell, and Takayuki Yokota-Murakami |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on February 23, 2018) |
Subject |
Literature -- History and criticism -- Theory, etc.
|
|
Politics and literature.
|
|
Literature -- Political acpects
|
|
Narration (Rhetoric)
|
|
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Semiotics & Theory.
|
|
Literature -- Theory, etc.
|
|
Narration (Rhetoric)
|
|
Politics and literature
|
Genre/Form |
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
Author |
Mihailescu, Calin Andrei, 1956- editor.
|
|
Yokota, Jeri, 1959- editor.
|
LC no. |
2017060016 |
ISBN |
9789004358515 |
|
900435851X |
|