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Legacies of Paul de Man - Paperback

Legacies of Paul de Man - Paperback

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by Marc Redfield (Editor)

More than twenty years after his death, Paul de Man remains a haunting presence in the American academy. His name is linked not just with deconstruction, but with a deconstruction in America that continues to disturb the scholarly and pedagogical institution it inhabits. The academy seems driven to characterize de Manian deconstruction, again and again, as dead. Such reiterated acts of exorcism testify that de Man's ghost has in fact never been laid to rest, and for good reason: a dispassionate survey of recent trends in critical theory and practice reveals that de Man's influence is considerable and ongoing. His name still commands an aura of excitement, even danger: it stands for the pressure of a text and a theory that resists easy assimilation or containment.

The essays in this volume analyze and evaluate aspects of de Man's strange, powerful legacy. The opening contributions focus on his great theme of reading; subsequent chapters explore his complex notions of history, materiality, and aesthetic ideology, and examine his institutional role as a teacher and, more generally, as a charismatic figure associated with the fortunes of theory.

Because the notion of legacy immediately raises questions about the institutional transmission of thought, the collection concludes with two appendixes offering documentary aids to scholars interested in de Man as an institutional presence and pedagogue. The first appendix lists the courses taught by de Man at Yale; the second makes available a previously unpublished document, almost certainly authored by de Man: a course proposal for the undergraduate course Literature Z that de Man and Geoffrey Hartman began teaching at Yale in the spring of 1977.

Author Biography

Marc Redfield is Chair of the Department of Comparative Literature and Professor of Comparative Literature and English at Brown University. His most recent books are The Rhetoric of Terror: Reflections on 9/11 and the War on Terror (Fordham, 2009); and Theory at Yale: The Strange Case of Deconstruction in America (Fordham, 2016).

Number of Pages: 236
Dimensions: 0.62 x 8.19 x 5.82 IN
Publication Date: March 15, 2007