
Anti-Literature
Adam Joseph Shellhorse
(Author)Description
Product Details
Publisher | University of Pittsburgh Press |
Publish Date | April 27, 2017 |
Pages | 264 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780822964476 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 5.9 X 0.8 inches | 1.1 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Anti-literature" is the term Shellhorse gives to experimental texts that make space for previously excluded perspectives within literature not by mimetically representing historically marginalized experiences but, rather, by self-reflexively questioning the limits of literature as a representational regime. The stakes of this ambitious project amount to no less than reconceiving of the relationship between literature, politics, and identity in Latin America.-- "Transmodernity"
Anti-literature is a bold and timely intervention in a dire moment for "literary studies in the field of Latin American Studies. What is the epistemological status of the 'literary' today, if not an ambiguous force driven by machinistic inertia? . . . Ambitious in scope, theoretically sophisticated, and generous in its readings of a heterogeneous corpus, Shellhorse attempts to understand what is meant by "literature in contemporary posthegemonic times" Whether such interrogation opens up a desirable future, is the very heart of this important book.-- "Gerardo Muñoz, Princeton University, Infrapolitical Deconstruction"
Anti-Literature offers highly productive, provocative readings of major works of twentieth-century Brazilian and Argentine production, besides developing a welcome reassessment of current and recent debates on the literary--and the anti-literary--in Latin American studies.-- "Hispanic Review"
Anti-Literature is about a new way of understanding the subversive potential of literary and cultural production, and of reading it. . . . this is a book that challenges us to read in different ways.-- "Luso-Brazilian Review"
"Defying critical consensus at every turn. . . one of Anti-Literature's greatest merits is setting in conversation provinces of Latin Americanism that often talk past one another. . . . [Shellhorse's book] exemplif[ies] scholarship of the highest caliber."-- "Héctor Hoyos, Revista Hispánica Moderna"
A seminal study poised to spur ongoing conversation and debate. . . Shellhorse's model has implications far beyond the specific case studies offered . . . it is indispensable reading for anyone interested in the politics of avant-garde form in Latin American literature.-- "Ashley Brock, University of Pennsylvania"
Shellhorse proposes a new reading method that attends to the marginal, subaltern qualities of the literary text, qualities that exceed our attempts to name or fix them. De-emphasizing identity without sacrificing the political potency of literature and literary criticism, Shellhorse addresses literary as well as filmic production, placing them in urgent conversation with the most cutting-edge concepts coming out of critical theory and philosophy today. Anti-Literature is surely among the most original, theoretically sophisticated, yet accessible books published in a very long time. It promises to be one of the most important and widely-read new books in Latin American literary studies.-- "Erin Graff Zivin, University of Southern California"
Suggesting a theoretical revision of the term "literature" within Latin American studies, Shellhorse maintains that experimental writers seek to push the limits of writing and representation toward an anti-literary aesthetic of the sensible.-- "Choice"
This is a remarkable first book by a young teacher-scholar with impressive expository skills and a mature critical arsenal. . . . Shellhorse sets out ambitiously to expand the scope of what "literature" in Latin America might mean in this new millennium by elaborating a complex notion of "anti-literature." The aim is to develop a theory of anti-literature that stresses, depending on the author and/or work in question, the feminine, multimediality, genre-busting, aesthetic politics, and the subaltern. Throughout AJS shows he has done extensive research on his subjects and, refreshingly, he often challenges prevailing views about given works, authors, their historical projections, and the critical force of Latin American literature.-- "Charles A. Perrone, Chasqui"
This study is absolutely needed. It adds a lot to the important discussion on the nature of Latin American literature. Shellhorse's argument is exceedingly well-supported and expands the standard frontiers of this subject. A major contribution.-- "Earl E. Fitz, Vanderbilt University"
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