Skip to main content

A Philology of the Future

Essays in Honor of Jim Porter

A Philology of the Future cover

A Philology of the Future

Essays in Honor of Jim Porter

Quantity
In stock
$151.15 RRP $167.95 Website price saving $16.80 (10%)

Description

This book gathers a group of scholars whose work has been influenced by the distinctive dialogue between ancient philosophy (and rhetoric) and critical theory promoted by the scholarship of James I. Porter. A classicist who has pushed classics beyond itself – beyond its traditional boundaries – Porter has demonstrated that antiquity cannot be studied without participating in what is sometimes dismissively labeled “reception.”

The collection here does not simply celebrate the work of a major figure in the field of classics through a series of writing experiments, but locates the futures of classics in its predisposition to endless transformation, alteration, reconfiguration, and fugitive or exilic deterritorialization. Philology is a practice of philosophy in that contact with the ghosts of antiquity and its diachronic manifestations in modernity confronts the interpreter with opportunities for unlearning as well as learning, unthinking as well as thinking, and for engaging with impossibilities as well as possibilities. The essays gathered here, unified by these themes, include contributions on ancient philosophy and literature (Homer, Sappho, Democritus, the sophists, Aristotle, Lucretius, and Cicero); reflections on the sublime, which Porter has pivotally elucidated; interventions on the theme of philology and exile (in Nietzsche, Marx, Freud, and Derrida); and theoretical musings on the “agony of immanence,” the “biomatic,” the “atmospheric,” and the relationship between immigration and classical reception.

Table of Contents

1. For Jim: Toward a Philology of (Im)possible Futures, Mario Telo (UC Berkeley, USA)
2. “The Utopian Perfectibility of the World in Reverse”: William Kentridge, Jim Porter, and Book Seven of the Iliad, Alex Purves (UCLA, USA)
3. The Sounds of Sappho and the Sense of Philology, Sarah Nooter (University of Chicago, USA)
4. Thucydides and the Comparativist Gesture, David Fearn (University of Warwick, UK)
5. Can This Be Less Boring?: In Praise of the Dissoi Logoi's Rhetoric of Conflict and Contradiction, Ramona Naddaff (UC Berkeley, USA)
6. The Soul in a Sunbeam: Aristotle on Democritus's Fiery psuchê, Victoria Wohl (University of Toronto, Canada)
7. On the Sympathetic Community of Body and Soul in Book 3 of Lucretius: Loving Life and Learning to Face Death, Brooke Holmes (Princeton University, USA)
8. Cicero's Regret, Shane Butler (Johns Hopkins University, USA)
9. The Immigration of Classical Antiquity: Border in Ovid, Dionne Brand, and Jenny Erpenbeck, Emily Greenwood (Harvard University, USA)
10. Longinus and the Light, Phiroze Vasunia (UCL, UK)
11. The Birth of Philology Out of the Spirit of Pedagogy, Joshua Billings (Princeton University, USA)
12. “Homer's Contest” as Nietzsche's Contest over Hellenism, Charles Stocking (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
13. Marx and the Philology of the Future, Erik Gunderson (University of Toronto, Canada)
14. Moses and Monolingualism: Freud, Derrida, and the Philology of Exile, Miriam Leonard (UCL, UK)
15. The Classical Biome, Tim Whitmarsh (University of Cambridge, UK)

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published Jan 08 2026
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Pages 296
ISBN 9781350473348
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Dimensions 234 x 156 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

ONLINE RESOURCES

Bloomsbury Collections

This book is available on Bloomsbury Collections where your library has access.

Related Titles

Environment: Staging