ABSTRACT

Attending to the Literary: The Distinctiveness of Literature is a foray into current debates about the nature of the literary. What is literary? Is literarity a thing? Are there still aesthetic standards of taste? Is the category of literary aesthetics an obstacle to understanding the uses of literature? What does it mean to count the reading of literature as an experience in its own right? What would be the deficits to human experience without literature?

Attending to the Literary addresses all of these questions with a view to challenging the notion of literarity as merely representative of experience. On the contrary, Alan Singer shows how literarity is an enacting of experience. Through close readings of an eclectic repertoire of literary sentences – culled from the genres of fiction, poetry, and drama – Singer demonstrates how syntax stages human capacities for attending ever more consequentially to the world of practical experience. These stagings of forms of attention involve readers in the drama of reason-giving and expand the possibilities of rational imagination.

Attending to the Literary speaks to a broad audience of readers for whom the question "Does literature matter?" remains an urgent intellectual challenge.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Literature as Staging for Human Capacities: Snarling the Allegory

chapter 1|24 pages

The Mirror of Attention

Affording Literarity

chapter 2|27 pages

Sense and Sentences

Writing the Prose of the World

chapter 3|21 pages

Reading for Experience

The Compositional Ethos

chapter 4|21 pages

The Potentiality of the Reader

chapter 5|24 pages

Literarity and Possibility