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10 Three Problems of Formalism: An Object-Oriented View

  • Graham Harman
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Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Acknowledgements viii
  4. Editors ’ Preface ix
  5. General Introduction: Opposition of the Faculties, Philosophy’s Literary Impossibility 1
  6. PART I Beyond the Postmodern: Literature, Philosophy, and the Question of the Contemporary
  7. Editor’s Introduction 17
  8. 1 The Polymodern Condition: A Report on Cluelessness 22
  9. 2 Metamodernism: Period, Structure of Feeling, and Cultural Logic – A Case Study of Contemporary Autofiction 41
  10. 3 The Ends of Metafiction, or, The Romantic Time of Egan’s Goon Squad 55
  11. 4 Virtually Human: Posthumanism and (Post-)Postmodern Cyberspace in Gary Shteyngart ’s Super Sad True Love Story 74
  12. PART II Beyond the Subject: Posthuman and Nonhuman Literary Criticism
  13. Editor’s Introduction 97
  14. 5 Hélène Cixous’s So Close; or, Moving Matters on the Subject 102
  15. 6 Meillassoux, the Critique of Correlationism, and British Romanticism 122
  16. 7 Fictional Objects Fictional Subjects 138
  17. 8 On the Death of Meaning 152
  18. PART III Beyond the Object: Reading Literature through Actor-Network Theory, Object-Oriented Philosophy, and the New Materialisms
  19. Editor’s Introduction 173
  20. 9 Neither Billiard Ball nor Planet B: Latour’s Gaia, Literary Agency, and the Challenge of Writing Geohistory in the Anthropocene Moment 179
  21. 10 Three Problems of Formalism: An Object-Oriented View 198
  22. 11 A Field of Heteronyms and Homonyms: New Materialism, Speculative Fabulation, and Wor(l)ding 215
  23. 12 Emerson’s Speculative Pragmatism 234
  24. PART IV Ordinary Language Criticism: Reading Literature through Anglo-American Philosophy
  25. Editor’s Introduction 253
  26. 13 Two Examples of Ordinary Language Criticism: Reading Conant Reading Rorty Reading Orwell – Interpretation at the Intersection of Philosophy and Literature 258
  27. 14 Stanley Cavell and the Politics of Modernism 279
  28. 15 Inferentialist Semantics, Intimationist Aesthetics, and Walde 297
  29. PART V Embodiment as Ethics: Literature and Life in the Anthropocene
  30. Editor’s Introduction 315
  31. 16 Living to Tell the Story: Characterisation, Narrative Perspective, and Ethics in Climate Crisis Flood Novels 321
  32. 17 Contemporary Anthropocene Novels: Ian McEwan’s Solar, Jeanette Winterson’s The Stone Gods, Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake and The Year of the Flood 338
  33. 18 The Day of the Dark Precursor : Philosophy, Fiction, and Fabulation at the End of the World – A Fictocritical Guide 361
  34. 19 So to Speak 382
  35. PART VI Politics after Discipline: Literature, Life, Control
  36. Editor’s Introduction 389
  37. 20 Literary Study’s Biopolitics 394
  38. 21 We Have Been Paranoid Too Long to Stop Now 410
  39. 22 Securing Neoliberalism: The Contingencies of Contemporary US Fiction 429
  40. 23 Automatic Art , Automated Trading: Finance, Fiction, and Philosophy 450
  41. Notes on Contributors 466
  42. Index 471
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