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Nour (Hrsg.) Dakkak

Anticipatory Materialisms in Literature and Philosophy, 1790-1930

Ebook (PDF Format)

Anticipatory Materialisms is a timely interdisciplinary collection that draws together ethics, politics and poetics to reimagine and interrogate human precedence in the material world. It presents both a profound and provocative engagement with literature and philosophy to assert the general interdependence of all matter in the natural world.-Lesa Scholl, author of Hunger Movements in Early Victorian LiteratureAnticipatory Materialisms explores nineteenth and early twentieth-century literature that pre-empts the recent philosophical 'turn' to materiality and affect. Critical volumes that approach literature via the prism of new materialism ar… Mehr

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Produktdetails


Weitere Autoren: Spence, Rebecca (Hrsg.) / Carruthers, Jo (Hrsg.)
  • ISBN: 978-3-030-29817-3
  • EAN: 9783030298173
  • Produktnummer: 33448741
  • Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • Erscheinungsjahr: 2020
  • Plattform: PDF
  • Masse: 2'858 KB

Über den Autor


Jo Carruthers has taught at the Universities of Manchester, Bristol and Lancaster and has published widely in the areas of literary studies, aesthetics, and religious and national identities. She has published two monographs, England's Secular Scripture: Islamophobia and the  Protestant Aesthetic (2011), and Esther through the Centuries (2008), the edited collection (with Andrew Tate) Spiritual Identities: Literature and the Post-Secular Imagination (2011), and co-edited with Mark Knight and Andrew Tate Literature  and the Bible: A Reader (2014). Nour Dakkak is a PhD candidate and associate lecturer in the Department of English and Creative Writing at Lancaster University. Her research examines human-world relationships in the works of E. M. Forster with a special interest in the representations of mobilities and materialities.Rebecca Spence is a PhD candidate and associate lecturer in the Department of English and Creative Writing at Lancaster University, funded by an AHRC NWCDTP +3 full-time award. Her research is driven by an interest in how nineteenth-century authors use auditory processes as both representational and experiential models for exploring the complexities of interpersonal communication in literary works.

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