In literary studies today, debates about the purpose of literary criticism and about the place of formalism within it continue to simmer across periods and approaches. Anna Kornbluh contributes to—and substantially shifts—that conversation in The Order of Forms by offering an exciting new category, political formalism, which she articulates through the co-emergence of aesthetic and mathematical formalisms in the nineteenth century. Within this framework, criticism can be understood as more affirmative and constructive, articulating commitments to aesthetic expression and social collectivity.
Kornbluh offers a powerful argument that political formalism, by valuing forms of sociability like the city and the state in and of themselves, provides a better understanding of literary form and its political possibilities than approaches that view form as a constraint. To make this argument, she takes up the case of literary realism, showing how novels by Dickens, Brontë, Hardy, and Carroll engage mathematical formalism as part of their political imagining. Realism, she shows, is best understood as an exercise in social modeling—more like formalist mathematics than social documentation. By modeling society, the realist novel focuses on what it considers the most elementary features of social relations and generates unique political insights. Proposing both this new theory of realism and the idea of political formalism, this inspired, eye-opening book will have far-reaching implications in literary studies.
Author(s): Anna Kornbluh
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 230
City: Chicago
Contents......Page 8
List of Figures......Page 10
Acknowledgments......Page 12
Introduction The Order of Forms: Mathematic, Aesthetic, and Political Formalisms......Page 14
1. The Realist Blueprint: For a Formalist Theory of Literary Realism......Page 46
2. The Set Theory of Wuthering Heights: Realism, Antagonism, and the Infi nities of Social Space......Page 69
3. The Limits of Bleak House......Page 92
4. Symbolic Logic on the Social Plane of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland......Page 117
5. Obscure Forms: The Social Geometry of Jude the Obscure......Page 135
6. States of Psychoanalysis: Formalization and the Space of the Political......Page 152
Conclusion Sustaining Forms......Page 169
Notes......Page 180
Bibliography......Page 208
Index......Page 220