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Mourning Modernism : Literature, Catastrophe, and the Politics of Consolation / Lecia Rosenthal.

De Gruyter Fordham University Press Complete eBook-Package Pre-2014 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Rosenthal, Lecia, Author.
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 online resource (192 p.)
Place of Publication:
New York, NY : Fordham University Press, [2022]
Language Note:
In English.
Summary:
Mourning Modernism: Literature, Catastrophe, and the Politics of Consolation examines the writing of catastrophe, mass death, and collective loss in 20th-century literature and criticism. With particular focus on texts by Virginia Woolf, Walter Benjamin, and W.G. Sebald, Mourning Modernism engages the century’s signal preoccupation with “world-ending,” a mixed rhetoric of totality and rupture, finitude and survival, the end and its posthumous remainders. Fascinated with the threat of apocalypse, the century proliferates the spectacle of world-ending as a form of desire, an ambivalent compulsion to consume and outlive the “end of all.” In conversation with recent discussions of the century’s passion for the real, and taking on the century’s late aesthetics of subtraction, Mourning Modernism reads the century’s obsession with negative forms of ending and outcome. Drawing connections between the current interest in the category of trauma and the tradition of the sublime, Mourning Modernism reframes the terms of the modernist experiment and its aesthetics of the breaking-point from the lens of a late sublime.
Contents:
Frontmatter
Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Catastrophe Culture, Atrocity Supplements
2. Virginia Woolf: Reading Remains
3. Walter Benjamin on Radio: Catastrophe for Children
4. On the Late Sublime: W. G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn
Toward a Conclusion: The In-Exhaustible Catastrophe
Notes
Index
Notes:
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 29. Mrz 2022)
ISBN:
0-8232-9218-5
OCLC:
1350688646

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