1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910813825203321

Autore

Wawrzinek Jennifer

Titolo

Ambiguous subjects : dissolution and metamorphosis in the postmodern sublime / / Jennifer Wawrzinek

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam ; ; New York, NY, : Rodopi, 2008

ISBN

1-282-59425-7

9786612594250

90-420-2901-3

1-4416-0647-5

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (157 p.)

Collana

Genus--gender in modern culture ; ; 10

Disciplina

111.85

Soggetti

Experience in literature

Grotesque in literature

Human body (Philosophy)

Human body in literature

Mind and body

Postmodernism (Literature)

Subjectivity in literature

Sublime, The, in literature

Sublime, The

Transcendence (Philosophy) in literature

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Originally presented the author's thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Melbourne, 2008.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Preliminary Material -- Sublime Politics -- The Haunting of Transcendence -- Translation as Erotic Surrender: Nicole Brossard’s Radical Other in Le Désert mauve -- Navigating the Contingent Subject in Morgan Yasbincek’s liv -- “When I’m Up There It Feels Like Heaven”: Aerial Bodies and The Women’s Circus Secrets -- A New Transcendental -- Works Cited.

Sommario/riassunto

In the history of ideas, the aesthetic categories of the sublime and the grotesque have exerted a powerful force over the cultural imagination. Ambiguous Subjects is one of the first studies to examine the



relationship between these concepts. Tracing the history of the sublime from the eighteenth century through Burke and Kant, Wawrzinek illustrates the ways in which the sublime has traditionally been privileged as an inherently masculine and imperialist mode of experience that polices and abjects the grotesque to the margins of acceptable discourse, and the way in which twentieth-century reconfigurations of the sublime increasingly enable the productive situating of these concepts within a dialogic relation as a means of instating an ethical relation to others. This book examines the articulations of both the sublime and the grotesque in three postmodern texts. Looking at novels by Nicole Brossard and Morgan Yasbincek, and the performance work of The Women’s Circus, Wawrzinek illuminates the ways in which these writers and performers restructure the spatial and temporal parameters of the sublime in order to allow various forms of highly contingent transcendence that always necessarily remain in relation to the grotesque body. Ambiguous Subjects illustrates how the sublime and the grotesque can co-exist in a manner where each depends on and is inflected through the other, thus enabling a notion of individuality and of community as contingent, but nevertheless very real, moments in time. Ambiguous Subjects is essential reading for anyone interested in aesthetics, continental philosophy, gender studies, literary theory, sociology and politics.