Mere Reading: The Poetics of Wonder in Modern American Novels

Mere Reading: The Poetics of Wonder in Modern American Novels

by Lee Clark Mitchell
Mere Reading: The Poetics of Wonder in Modern American Novels

Mere Reading: The Poetics of Wonder in Modern American Novels

by Lee Clark Mitchell

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Overview

Named a Choice Outstanding Academic Title of the Year

Mere Reading
argues for a return to the foundations of literary study established nearly a century ago. Following a recent period dominated by symptomatic analyses of fictional texts (new historicist, Marxist, feminist, identity-political), Lee Clark Mitchell joins a burgeoning neo-formalist movement in challenging readers to embrace a rationale for literary criticism that has too long been ignored-a neglect that corresponds, perhaps not coincidentally, to a flight from literature courses themselves.

In close readings of six American novels spread over the past century-Willa Cather's The Professor's House, Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita, Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping, Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian and The Road, and Junot Díaz's The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao-Mitchell traces a shifting strain of late modernist innovation that celebrates a species of magic and wonder, of aesthetic “bliss” (as Barthes and Nabokov both coincidentally described the experience) that dumbfounds the reader and compels a reassessment of interpretive assumptions. The novels included here aspire to being read slowly, so that sounds, rhythms, repetitions, rhymes, and other verbal features take on a heightened poetic status-in critic Barbara Johnson's words, “the rigorous perversity and seductiveness of literary language”-thwarting pressures of plot that otherwise push us ineluctably forward.

In each chapter, the return to “mere reading” becomes paradoxically a gesture that honors the intractability of fictional texts, their sheer irresolution, indeed the way in which their “literary” status rests on the play of irreconcilables that emerges from the verbal tensions we find ourselves first astonished by, then delighting in.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501329678
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 04/20/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 643 KB

About the Author

Lee Clark Mitchell is Holmes Professor of Belles-Lettres at Princeton University, USA. Among his previous publications are Witnesses to a Vanishing America: The Nineteenth-Century Response (1981), Westerns: Making the Man in Fiction and Film (1996), and Determined Fictions: American Literary Naturalism (1989).
Lee Clark Mitchell is Holmes Professor of Belles-Lettres at Princeton University, USA. He is the author of six books, including Mere Reading: The Poetics of Wonder in Modern American Novels (Bloomsbury 2017), which named a Choice Outstanding Academic Title of the Year, Late Westerns: The Persistence of a Genre (Nebraska University Press, 2018), and More Time: Contemporary Short Stories and Late Style (Oxford University Press, 2019). He is the editor of five books, including The American by Henry James (Signet, 2005, with “Introduction”) and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain (Oxford University Press, 1993, with "Introduction").

Table of Contents

Introduction: Slowing Down
1. Possession in The Professor's House (1925)
2. Oscillation in Lolita (1955)
3. Hospitality in Housekeeping (1980)
4. Violence in Blood Meridian (1985)
5. Language in The Road (2006)
6. Belatedness in The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (2007)
Epilogue: Resisting Rules
Bibliography
Index
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