ABSTRACT

Futures of Comparative Literature is a cutting edge report on the state of the discipline in Comparative Literature. Offering a broad spectrum of viewpoints from all career stages, a variety of different institutions, and many language backgrounds, this collection is fully global and diverse. The book includes previously unpublished interviews with key figures in the discipline as well as a range of different essays – short pieces on key topics and longer, in-depth pieces. It is divided into seven sections: Futures of Comparative Literature; Theories, Histories, Methods; Worlds; Areas and Regions; Languages, Vernaculars, Translations; Media; Beyond the Human; and contains over 50 essays on topics such as: Queer Reading; Human Rights; Fundamentalism; Untranslatability; Big Data; Environmental Humanities. It also includes current facts and figures from the American Comparative Literature Association as well as a very useful general introduction, situating and introducing the material. Curated by an expert editorial team, this book captures what is at stake in the study of Comparative Literature today.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Comparative literature and the new humanities

part |21 pages

Futures of comparative literature

chapter |2 pages

Performative scholarship

chapter |5 pages

The reign of the amoeba

Further thoughts about the future of comparative literature

chapter |6 pages

Comparative literature

The next ten years

part |86 pages

Theories, histories, methods

chapter |2 pages

Periodization

chapter |14 pages

Comparative literary history

A conversation with Marcel Cornis-Pope and Margaret R. Higonnet

chapter |2 pages

Petrocriticism

chapter |6 pages

Minimal criticism

chapter |2 pages

Philology

chapter |13 pages

Comparative literature and affect theory

A conversation with R. A. Judy and Rei Terada

chapter |6 pages

Comparatively lesbian

Queer/feminist theory and the sexuality of history

chapter |8 pages

Queer double cross

Doing (it with) comp lit

chapter |2 pages

Trans

chapter |4 pages

Future reading

part |52 pages

Worlds

chapter |5 pages

World famous, locally

Insights from the study of international canonization

chapter |10 pages

“World,” “Globe,” “Planet”

Comparative literature, planetary studies, and cultural debt after the global turn

chapter |4 pages

Baku, literary common

chapter |11 pages

Aesthetic humanity and the great world community

Kant and Kang Youwei

chapter |3 pages

Neoliberalism

chapter |2 pages

Counterinsurgency

chapter |2 pages

Human rights

part |44 pages

Areas and regions

chapter |3 pages

Areas

Bigger than the nation, smaller than the world

chapter |13 pages

Comparative literature and Latin American literary studies

A conversation with José Quiroga, Wander Melo Miranda, Erin Graff Zivin, Francine Masiello, Sarah Ann Wells, Ivonne del Valle, and Mariano Siskind

chapter |2 pages

Postcolonial studies

chapter |2 pages

Fundamentalism

chapter |3 pages

Afropolitan

part |23 pages

Languages, vernaculars, translations

chapter |5 pages

Reading and speaking for translation

De-institutionalizing the institutions of literary study

chapter |2 pages

The vernacular

chapter |2 pages

The Sinophone

chapter |4 pages

Pseudotranslation

chapter |2 pages

Untranslatability

part |53 pages

Media

chapter |9 pages

Archive of the now

chapter |3 pages

Big data

chapter |3 pages

Next

The new orality

chapter |12 pages

Comparative literature and computational criticism

A conversation with Franco Moretti

chapter |5 pages

Platforms of the imagination

Stages of electronic literature Mexico 2015

part |35 pages

Beyond the human

part |6 pages

Facts and figures

chapter |4 pages

Comparative literature in the United States

Facts and figures