Evanescence and Form

Evanescence and Form

Author: C. Inouye

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2008-09-29

Total Pages: 273

ISBN-13: 0230615481

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This book explores the Japanese notion of hakanasa - the evanescence of all things. Responses to this idea have been various and even contradictory: asceticism, fatalism, conformism, hedonism, materialism, and careerism. This book examines the ties between an epistemology of constant change and Japan's formal emphasis on etiquette and visuality.


What Forms Can Do

What Forms Can Do

Author: Patrick Crowley

Publisher: Liverpool University Press

Published: 2020-02-26

Total Pages: 342

ISBN-13: 1789624754

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How does form propose a bridge between the text and the world beyond? This volume investigates the agency of form across a spectrum of twentieth- and twenty-first century French and Francophone writings, renewing the engagement with form that has been a key feature of French cultural production and of analysis in French studies.


The Order of Forms

The Order of Forms

Author: Anna Kornbluh

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2019-11-20

Total Pages: 230

ISBN-13: 022665348X

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In literary studies today, debates about the purpose of literary criticism and about the place of formalism within it continue to simmer across periods and approaches. Anna Kornbluh contributes to—and substantially shifts—that conversation in The Order of Forms by offering an exciting new category, political formalism, which she articulates through the co-emergence of aesthetic and mathematical formalisms in the nineteenth century. Within this framework, criticism can be understood as more affirmative and constructive, articulating commitments to aesthetic expression and social collectivity. Kornbluh offers a powerful argument that political formalism, by valuing forms of sociability like the city and the state in and of themselves, provides a better understanding of literary form and its political possibilities than approaches that view form as a constraint. To make this argument, she takes up the case of literary realism, showing how novels by Dickens, Brontë, Hardy, and Carroll engage mathematical formalism as part of their political imagining. Realism, she shows, is best understood as an exercise in social modeling—more like formalist mathematics than social documentation. By modeling society, the realist novel focuses on what it considers the most elementary features of social relations and generates unique political insights. Proposing both this new theory of realism and the idea of political formalism, this inspired, eye-opening book will have far-reaching implications in literary studies.


The Great Image Has No Form, Or On the Nonobject Through Painting

The Great Image Has No Form, Or On the Nonobject Through Painting

Author: François Jullien

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2009-12

Total Pages: 297

ISBN-13: 0226415309

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In premodern China, painters used imagery not to mirror the world, but to evoke unfathomable experience. Considering this art alongside the philosophical traditions that inform it, this book explores the 'nonobject', a notion exemplified by paintings that do not seek to represent observable surroundings.


A Question of Syllables

A Question of Syllables

Author: Clive Scott

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 1986-09-11

Total Pages: 229

ISBN-13: 0521325846

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Dr Scott examines the intimate life of words in verse, with all their fluctuations of meaning, mood and tone.