ABSTRACT

What is culture? What are cultures? Are literary texts and cultural texts different? What do literature and other fields engaged in cultural work hav in common? What can literary studies profitably do with other disciplines? What can cultural studies tell us about culture? This volume of work, fresh from the dig, presents a timely account of current thinking on central issues within and beyond the humanities today. Field Work brings together such leading figures as Sacvan Bercovitch and Helen Vendler, Anthony Appiah and Barbara Johnson, Seyla Benhabib and Norman Bryson, Martha Minow and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Marjorie Garber and Susan Suleiman, as well as scholars in areas as diverse as legal studies and Renaissance literature. From a rich variety of perspectives, these scholars excavate and explore foundational questions in their fields. Contributors: K. Anthony Appiah, Seyla Benhabib, Sacvan Bercovitch, Svetlana Boym, Norman Bryson, Lawrence Buell, Patrick Ford, Paul B. Franklin, Marjorie Garber, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Mary Gaylord, Beatrice Hanssen, Barbara Johnson, David Kennedy, Joseph Koener, Laura Korobkin, Meredith McGill, Jeffrey Masten, Jann Matlock, Martha Minow, Gregory Nagy, Stephen Owen, Judith Ryan, Elaine Scarry, Doris Sommer, Mary Steedly, Susan Suleiman, William Todd, Helen Vendler, Rebecca L. Walkowitz, Irene Winter

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Field Work

part 1|43 pages

What Is Culture? What Are Cultures?

chapter 3|8 pages

Custody Battles

chapter 4|7 pages

Identity

Political Not Cultural 1

chapter 5|11 pages

Productive Discomfort

Anthropological Fieldwork and the Dislocation of Etiquette

part 2|41 pages

National Identities, Global Identities

chapter 6|14 pages

Planet Rap

Notes on the Globalization of Culture

chapter 7|10 pages

Violence and Interpretation

Enzensberger's “Civil Wars”

chapter 8|10 pages

OUR AmeRíca

chapter 9|7 pages

Are We Post-American Studies?

part 3|30 pages

National Literatures in a Global World?

part 4|25 pages

One Poem, Three Readers

chapter 14|8 pages

Reading a Poem

chapter 15|7 pages

Ode on a Public Thing

chapter 16|6 pages

Enlistment and Refusal

The Task of Public Poetry

part 5|22 pages

Textual Editing

chapter 17|13 pages

Textual Deviance

Ganymede's Hand in As You Like It

chapter 19|4 pages

Editing Homer, Rethinking the Bard

part 6|31 pages

Reading Visual Images

chapter 20|8 pages

Morimura's Olympia

chapter 21|13 pages

Reading Invisibility

chapter 22|8 pages

“Agency”

An Alternative to Subjectivity

part 7|39 pages

Law and Literature

chapter 23|9 pages

Law's Literature

chapter 24|11 pages

The Made-Up and the Made-Real

chapter 26|7 pages

Telling Stories, Telling Law

part 8|23 pages

The Literary and the Autobiographical