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book: Literature as Dialogue
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Literature as Dialogue

Invitations offered and negotiated
  • Edited by: Roger D. Sell
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2014
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Dialogue Studies
This book is in the series

About this book

How is it that some texts achieve the status of literature? Partly, at least, because the relationship they allow between their writers and the people who respond to them is fundamentally egalitarian. This is the insight explored by members of the Åbo literary communication network, who in this new book develop fresh approaches to literary works of widely varied provenance. The authors examined have written in Ancient Greek, Táng Dynasty Chinese, Middle, Modern and Contemporary English, German, Romanian, Polish, Russian and Hebrew. But each and every one of them is shown as having offered their human fellows something which, despite some striking appearances to the contrary, amounts to a welcoming invitation. This their audiences have then been able to negotiate in a spirit of dialogical interchange.
Part I of the book poses the question: How, in offering their invitation, have writers respected their audiences’ human autonomy? This is the province of what Åbo scholars call "communicational criticism". Part II asks how an audience negotiating a literary invitation can be encouraged to respect the human autonomy of the writer who has offered it. In Åbo parlance, such encouragement is the task of "mediating criticism". These two modes of criticism naturally complement each other, and in their shared concern for communicational ethics ultimately seek to further a post-postmodern world that would be global without being hegemonic.


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Roger D. Sell
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1
Part I. Communicational criticism: Evaluating the invitations offered to audiences by writers

Swift’s A Modest Proposal and Plato’s Crito
David Fishelov
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23

The hermetic poetry of Wáng Wéi and Paul Celan
Yi Chen
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41

Julian Barnes’s Talking It Over and Love, etc.
Nina Muždeka
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67

Antonio Castore
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79

Caryl Phillips’s Higher Ground (1989) and Marie NDiaye’s Trois femmes puissantes (2009)
Bénédicte Ledent
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99

Joseph Conrad’s “Falk”
Leona Toker
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115
Part II. Mediating criticism: Helping audiences to negotiate writers’ invitations

Joyce’s The Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Anja Müller-Wood
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137

Roger D. Sell
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161

Pamela M. King
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177

The Christian Orthodox poetry of Scott Cairns and Cristian Popescu
Carmen Popescu
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197

From a series of translations, through a series of retextualizations, towards a reception series:
Marta Anna Skwara
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219

Reuven Asher Braudes’ The Two Poles
Helena Rimon
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237

Friedrich Schlegel’s fragments
Guillaume Lejeune
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251

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271

Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
July 21, 2014
eBook ISBN:
9789027269898
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
274
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