When something called theory first broke onto the seemingly stagnant scene of literary studies, it offered bright new ways and fields for critical reading: new methods and subjects, and also new words to speak them. The syllabus and the styles would never be the same, and reading was proudly claimed as a mode of social critique. The short pieces brought together in Talking Walking engage with all sorts of arguments then, now and earlier about the uses and history of critical reading -- of literature, and also of other cultural forms. There is much on the changing styles of literary-critical writing, and on the place of particular writers -- Virginia Woolf or Jacques Derrida -- in contemporary critical culture. There are pieces on clichés, on footnotes, on the language of the university job interview, on the use of domesticate as a catch-all negative term. There are also essays on cultural questions informed by critical theory. For instance: why has the topic of walking been such a fruitful thinking theme in literature and philosophy? How does the history of shopping and marketing theory intersect with those of literature and subjectivity? How, in the light of reproductive technologies and new social forms, has becoming a parent turned into a culturally prominent kind of story? These are some of the questions that arise in the interview and essays that make up Rachel Bowlbys book, which derives from several decades of working and writing and talking and walking within the changing contemporary landscape of literary and critical studies. Old and new arrivals into this world will find pleasures of reading and matter for thinking on every page.
Author(s): Rachel Bowlby
Series: (Critical Voices)
Publisher: Sussex Academic Press (UK)
Year: 2018
Language: English
Pages: 280
Tags: Literary Criticism, Literary Theory, Cultural Studies
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Preface
Modern Spaces
1 Talking Walking
2 'Half Art': Baudelaire’s The Painter of Modern Life
3 Readable City
4 Motoring through History: Woolf’s ‘Evening over Sussex’
5 Shopping for Christmas
6 Please Enter Your Pin
Family Mutations
7 After OEdipus: Changing Family Stories
8 The Third Parent
9 Woolf and Childhood Abuse
10 Kinship under All: Judith Butler on Antigone
11 James’s Maisie in Manhattan
Critical Languages
12 Domestication
13 The Joy of Footnotes
14 Clichés in the Psychology of Advertising
15 Who’s Framing Virginia Woolf?
16 Woolf’s Working Window
17 Woolf in Scholarly Form
18 Ginny Whizz
19 The Pinker Thinker
20 Cultural Studies and the Literary
21 Derrida’s ‘Once and for All’
22 Derrida One Day
23 Yale Theory
24 The Future of Literary Thinking
25 Passionate about Literature!
Interview
26 Interview with David Jonathan Y. Bayot and Jeremy De Chavez
Acknowledgements
Index
About Sussex Academic Press