ABSTRACT

If "event" is a proper name we reserve for monumental changes, crises, transitions and ruptures that are by their very nature unnameable or unthinkable, then this volume is an attempt to set up an encounter between such eventhood as it comes to have a bearing on literary works and the work of reading literature.

As the event continues to provide a valuable analytical paradigm for work undertaken within the newer subdisciplines of literary and critical theory, including close reading, bio- politics, world literature, and eco- criticism, this volume makes a concerted effort to update the scholarship in this area and foreground the recent resurgence of interest in the concept. The book provides both a retrospective appraisal of the significance of events to literary studies and the literary humanities, as well as contemporary and prospective appraisals of the same, and thus would appeal scholars and instructors in the areas of literary theory, comparative literature and philosophical aesthetics alike.

Along with a specialist focus on thinkers such as Derrida, Badiou, Deleuze and Malabou, the essays in this volume read a wide corpus of literature ranging from Han Kang, Homer, Renee Gladman, Proust and Flaubert to Yoruba ideophones, Browning, Anne Carson, Jenichiro Oyabe and Ben Lerner.

chapter |24 pages

From, Event

part Section I|65 pages

Senses

chapter 1|15 pages

Plasticity and the Event of Literature

Reading Catherine Malabou with Anne Carson

chapter 2|15 pages

Margin, Letter, and Sentence

The Graphic Event

chapter 4|16 pages

‘Peut-être aurais-je dû penser’

Research and Event in Proust

part Section II|70 pages

Possibility/Impossibility

chapter 5|22 pages

Poetics of the Event or Evental Poetics?

Writing as Becoming Imperceptible in Howard Barker's Hurts Given and Received

chapter 7|17 pages

The Withness of the Earth

Haptic Epistemology in Climatic Times

chapter 8|13 pages

What Happens When Nothing Happens?

Near- and Micro-Events in Contemporary Poetry

part Section III|66 pages

After

chapter 9|17 pages

Plastic Events, Spectral Events

Literature and the “Real of the Phantasm,” Between Malabou and Derrida

chapter 10|15 pages

On Deities

The Aesthetics of Concretion

chapter 11|15 pages

Lẹ́yìn Kété Nibi Ń Ṣẹlẹ̀

Disaster, Event, and Ideophone

chapter 12|17 pages

The Eventful Shipwreck

Robinson Crusoe, Jenichiro Oyabe, and the World Literary Map of the Drifters

part Section IV|63 pages

Forms

chapter 13|14 pages

The Event of the Literary Work

chapter 14|15 pages

History, Tearing

Hamacher's Literary Events

chapter 15|16 pages

Serendipitous Events

Failures and Transformations of Projects in Contemporary Anglophone Literature

chapter 16|16 pages

Narrating the Other

On Speaking of the Origin of Time and the Time of the Origin