Edinburgh University Press
Formal Matters
About this book
Formal Matters re-examines the postmodernist insistence that the body escapes signification by turning to an unexpected source: early and mid-century formalisms. Bringing together formalism’s endeavour to give shape to the ineffable with postmodernism’s discursive body, the book argues that embodiment—or the experience of the lived, corporeal body—is not what resists representation but what constitutes form.
Working at the intersection of formalist criticism, phenomenology, and body studies, Zoë Roth reassesses the relationship between embodiment and form in a range of modern European authors, including Primo Levi, Maurice Blanchot, Samuel Beckett, and Anne F. Garréta. Through close textual analysis, Formal Matters provides a new method for grasping embodied experience where it appears most attenuated and fragmented. It provides an original account of the body’s relationship to language and representation, while also reinvigorating formalist methods with political potential.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Acknowledgments
vi -
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Introduction: The Matter of Form
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1 The Corporeal Urn
51 -
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2 La Pensée incarnée: Embodying the Unrepresentable in Anne F. Garréta’s Sphinx
69 -
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3 “All life is figure and ground”: Samuel Beckett and the Politics of Embodied Form
98 -
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4 The Unbearable Lightness of Being: Chiasmus, Embodiment, and Interpretation in Maurice Blanchot
138 -
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5 The Hunger Artist: Testimony, Representation, and Embodiment in Primo Levi
151 -
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Afterword Against the Unrepresentable: The Common Sense of Embodied Form
193 -
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Bibliography
205 -
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Index
220