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Melville, Mapping and Globalization
Literary Cartography in the American Baroque Writer
Melville, Mapping and Globalization
Literary Cartography in the American Baroque Writer
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Description
Drawing on the work of a range of literary and social critics (including Deleuze, Foucault, Jameson, and Moretti), Tally argues that Melville's distinct literary form enabled his critique of the dominant national narrative of his own time and proleptically undermined the national literary tradition of American Studies a century later. Melville's hypercanonical status in the United States makes his work all the more crucial for understanding the role of literature in a post-American epoch.
Offering bold new interpretations and theoretical juxtapositions, Tally presents a postnational Melville, well suited to establishing new approaches to American and world literature in the twenty-first century.
Table of Contents
Preface: "When Leviathan's the text"
1. Out of Bounds: Melville's American Baroque
2. Spaces of American Literature: Geography and Narrative Form
3. "An everlasting terra incognita": Globalization and World Literature
4. Anti-Ishmael
5. Marine Nomadology: Melville's Antinomy of Pure Reason
6. "Spaces that before were blank": The Utopia of the Periphery
7. A Prosy Stroll: Overview and the Urban Itinerary
8. The Ambiguities of Place: Local Narrative and the Global City
Conclusion: "Leviathan is not the biggest fish," or, The Cartography of the Kraken
Bibliography
Index
Product details
Published | 09 Aug 2009 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 192 |
ISBN | 9781441103307 |
Imprint | Continuum |
Series | Continuum Literary Studies |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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"In Melville, Mapping and Globalization: Literary Cartography in the American Baroque Writer, Robert Tally, unlike the vast majority of his predecessors, refuses the temptation to domesticate Herman Melville's polyvalent literary excesses. Instead he goes all out to think them positively. The result is a major contribution to the New Americanist effort to reconstellate Melville's work out of the American nationalist context where it has been mired into the global context where it has always belonged." - Distinguished Professor William V. Spanos, Binghamton University, New York, USA
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Tally's reading raises provocative questions about neglected dimensions of Melville's work. This book would be helpful for upper-level undergraduates and scholars alike.
Routledge ABES