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Epilogue: The Practice of Recommencing: Toward a Cosmopolitanism of the Dispossessed Belonging
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgments V
- Contents VII
- Introduction: The Cosmopolitan Axis: Agencies and/or Enablers 1
-
Part I: Toward a Global Community: The Emergence of the Modern Idea of Literature
- 1. The Divided Legacy of the Republic of Letters: Emancipation and Trauma 33
- 2. The Fissured Identity of Literature: National Universalism and/or Cosmopolitan Nationalism 57
- 3. The Janus Face of Literary Bildung: Education and/or Self-Formation? 83
- 4. Who Voices Universal History? Kant’s “Mankind” and/or Herder’s “Nature” 99
- 5. Who Worlds the Literature? Goethe’s Weltliteratur and Globalization 133
-
Part II: An Observer under Observation: The Cosmopolitan Legacy of Modern Theory
- 6. Interiorizing the Exteriority: The Cosmopolitan Authorization of the Theoretical Truth 179
- 7. The Narrative of Permanent Displacement: Early German Romanticism and Its Theoretical Afterlife 195
- 8. The Oppositional Literary Transcendental: The Russian Formalist Rewriting of Early Romanticist Cosmopolitanism 213
- 9. The All-Devouring Modern Mind: Bakhtin’s Cosmopolitan Self 235
- 10. Countering the Empirical Evidence: From Immigrant Cosmopolitanism to a Cosmopolitanism of the Disregarded 257
- 11. Political and/or Literary Community: From Class to Messianic Cosmopolitanism 285
- 12. Literature as Deterritorialization: New Vistas for Democracy? 319
- Epilogue: The Practice of Recommencing: Toward a Cosmopolitanism of the Dispossessed Belonging 345
- References 357
- Index 385
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgments V
- Contents VII
- Introduction: The Cosmopolitan Axis: Agencies and/or Enablers 1
-
Part I: Toward a Global Community: The Emergence of the Modern Idea of Literature
- 1. The Divided Legacy of the Republic of Letters: Emancipation and Trauma 33
- 2. The Fissured Identity of Literature: National Universalism and/or Cosmopolitan Nationalism 57
- 3. The Janus Face of Literary Bildung: Education and/or Self-Formation? 83
- 4. Who Voices Universal History? Kant’s “Mankind” and/or Herder’s “Nature” 99
- 5. Who Worlds the Literature? Goethe’s Weltliteratur and Globalization 133
-
Part II: An Observer under Observation: The Cosmopolitan Legacy of Modern Theory
- 6. Interiorizing the Exteriority: The Cosmopolitan Authorization of the Theoretical Truth 179
- 7. The Narrative of Permanent Displacement: Early German Romanticism and Its Theoretical Afterlife 195
- 8. The Oppositional Literary Transcendental: The Russian Formalist Rewriting of Early Romanticist Cosmopolitanism 213
- 9. The All-Devouring Modern Mind: Bakhtin’s Cosmopolitan Self 235
- 10. Countering the Empirical Evidence: From Immigrant Cosmopolitanism to a Cosmopolitanism of the Disregarded 257
- 11. Political and/or Literary Community: From Class to Messianic Cosmopolitanism 285
- 12. Literature as Deterritorialization: New Vistas for Democracy? 319
- Epilogue: The Practice of Recommencing: Toward a Cosmopolitanism of the Dispossessed Belonging 345
- References 357
- Index 385