'Strategic thinking for a writer articulates itself as dislike and as
allegiance.' In this wonderfully rich and diverse collection of
essays, Amit Chaudhuri explores the way in which writers understand
and promote their own work in antithesis to writers and movements that
have gone before. Chaudhuri's criticism disproves and questions
several assumptions—that a serious and original artist cannot think
critically in a way that matters; that criticism can't be imaginative,
and creative work contain radical argumentation; that a writer
reflecting on their own position and practice cannot be more than a
testimony of their work, but open up how we think of literary history
and reading. Illuminating new ways of thinking about Western and
non-Western traditions, prejudices, and preconceptions, Chaudhuri
shows us again that he takes nothing as a given: literary tradition,
the prevalent definitions of writing and culture; and the way the
market determines the way culture and language express themselves. He
asks us to look again at what we mean by the modern, and how it might
be possible to think of the literary today.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192512604
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter