Winner of the 2020 AATSEEL Best Book in Literary Studies, sponsored by the American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages.
This book has been enriched not only by the works of the thinkers whose paths it follows, but also by the contributions — tangible and intangible — of many scholars, colleagues, students, and friends who have been part of my work on it. The book originates in a conference paper which subsequently became an article in the journal Common Knowledge , attracting many responses. Imme diately after the conference, Caryl Emerson, Bill Todd, Katerina Clark, Irina Paperno, and Laura Engelstein began encouraging me to write an entire book on the birth and death of literary theory; for this encouragement — then and over the years — I remain deeply grateful to them all. I was skeptical at the time, because I believed that the article format is better suited to my argument and concise style of presentation. Time has proved them right: the need to demonstrate the radical historicity of literary theory and its embeddedness in a particular regime of relevance that valorizes literature in ways so different from those before and after that, just as the compelling question about the legacies of literary theory, could not be addressed within the confines of that original text. As my research in this field evolved, I felt increasingly empow ered to expand and nuance my argument by drawing wider comparative par allels. Continuing to think as an intellectual historian, I have been at pains to discern the foundational paradoxes of literary theory, its time-limited mani festations concealed behind an illusion of timelessness.
Author(s): Galin Tihanov
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 280
Tags: European History, Russian Literary Criticism, European Literature, Literary Theory