<p>«From Freud and psychoanalysis to Derrida and philosophy, the question of mourning has been central to a whole strain of modern thought, especially in France. This fascinating and illuminating collection of essays explores the question in a wide range of intellectual and literary settings, from the French Revolution down through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It is a tour de force.»
(Christopher Prendergast FBA, King’s College, Cambridge)</p>
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<p>«This volume compellingly explores the intersection of ethics and aesthetics, showing how literature can enrich our sense of the complexity of mourning, grief and loss. It provides a significant contribution to scholarship on mourning, understood as a never-ending process of relationality.»
(Hanna Meretoja, University of Turku, Finland)</p>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Carole Bourne-Taylor is Associate Professor of French, Fellow and Tutor at Brasenose College, Oxford. Her interdisciplinary research includes publications on literature in English and French, phenomenology and the performing arts.
Sara-Louise Cooper is Lecturer in French at the University of Kent. Her research interests include migration, memory studies and comparative critical method. She has published work on Patrick Chamoiseau, Georges Perec, Vladimir Nabokov and Maryse Condé. She is currently working on a monograph on contemporary Caribbean writing and «world literature».