Imaginary Ethnographies: Literature, Culture, and Subjectivity

Imaginary Ethnographies: Literature, Culture, and Subjectivity

by Gabriele Schwab
Imaginary Ethnographies: Literature, Culture, and Subjectivity

Imaginary Ethnographies: Literature, Culture, and Subjectivity

by Gabriele Schwab

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Overview

Through readings of iconic figures such as the cannibal, the child, the alien, and the posthuman, Gabriele Schwab analyzes literary explorations at the boundaries of the human. Treating literature as a dynamic medium that "writes culture"—one that makes the abstract particular and local, and situates us within the world—Schwab pioneers a compelling approach to reading literary texts as "anthropologies of the future" that challenge habitual productions of meaning and knowledge.

Schwab's study draws on anthropology, philosophy, critical theory, and psychoanalysis to trace literature's profound impact on the cultural imaginary. Following a new interpretation of Derrida's and Lévi-Strauss's famous controversy over the indigenous Nambikwara, Schwab explores the vicissitudes of "traveling literature" through novels and films that fashion a cross-cultural imaginary. She also examines the intricate links between colonialism, cannibalism, melancholia, the fate of disenfranchised children under the forces of globalization, and the intertwinement of property and personhood in the neoliberal imaginary. Schwab concludes with an exploration of discourses on the posthuman, using Samuel Beckett's "The Lost Ones" and its depiction of a future lived under the conditions of minimal life. Drawing on a wide range of theories, Schwab engages the productive intersections between literary studies and anthropology, underscoring the power of literature to shape culture, subjectivity, and life.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231530804
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 09/18/2012
Series: NONE
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Gabriele Schwab is Chancellor's Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Irvine, and a faculty associate in the Department of Anthropology. She is also a trained psychoanalyst, and is affiliated with the New Center for Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles. Her books in English include Haunting Legacies: Violent Histories and Transgenerational Trauma and Accelerating Possessions: Global Futures of Property and Personhood (coedited with Bill Maurer).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Writing
1. Another Writing Lesson: Lévi-Strauss
2. Traveling Literature
3. Restriction and Mobility: Desire
Part II: Cannibals
4. The Melancholic Cannibal: Juan José Saer's The Witness and Marianne Wiggins's John Dollar
5. War Children in a Global World: Richard Powers's Operation Wandering Soul
6. Ethnographies of the Future: Personhood
Part III: Coda
Cosmographical Meditations on the Inhuman: Samuel Beckett's The Lost Ones
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Etienne Balibar

In exploring the many routes which make up the refined architecture of Gabrielle Schwab's new book, her readers will want to understand a theory and live an experience. The theory expands her definition of the literary as psychic life of language into all transformations of the knowledgeable to come. The experience is a destabilizing, but also humorous, encounter with various figures of the human's intimate aliens. Theory and experience, however, keep exceeding one another, and it is this dynamic décalage which gives Imaginary Ethnographies its lasting power of affecting our minds.

Etienne Balibar, author of Politics and the Other Scene

Ngugi wa Thiong'o

Gabriele Schwab has done it again. She has given us another work whose clarity of prose reflects a clarity of thought that crosses the often restrictive boundaries of disciplines. She marshals philosophy, psychoanalysis, anthropology, and politics in a reading of literature and culture that adds a distinctive Schwabian voice to critical theory. Imaginary Ethnographies consolidates her well-established reputation.

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