Estrangement and the Somatics of Literature
Tolstoy, Shklovsky, Brecht
Douglas Robinson 2008
E-Book: 338 pages
Price: 1.000 Toman
Download: Estrangement and the Somatics of Literature: Tolstoy, Shklovsky, Brecht (Robinson 2012).
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Drawing together the estrangement theories of Viktor Shklovsky and Bertolt Brecht with Leo Tolstoy’s theory of infection, Douglas Robinson studies the ways in which shared evaluative affect regulates both literary familiarity―convention and tradition―and modern strategies of alienation, depersonalization, and malaise.
This book begins with two assumptions, both taken from Tolstoy’s late aesthetic treatise What Is Art?(1898): that there is a malaise in culture, and that literature’s power to “infect” readers with the moral values of the author is a possible cure for this malaise. Exploring these ideas of estrangement within the contexts of earlier, contemporary, and later critical theory, Robinson argues that Shklovsky and Brecht follow Tolstoy in their efforts to fight depersonalization by imbuing readers with the transformative guidance of collectivized feeling. Robinson’s somatic approach to literature offers a powerful alternative to depersonalizing structuralist and poststructuralist theorization without simply retreating into conservative rejection and reaction.
Both a comparative study of Russian and German literary-theoretical history and an insightful examination of the somatics of literature, this groundbreaking work provides a deeper understanding of how literature affects the reader and offers a new perspective on present-day problems in poststructuralist approaches to the human condition.
Review
In his ground-breaking book, Douglas Robinson innovatively pulls together aesthetic theories by Leo Tolstoy, Viktor Shklovsky and Bertolt Brecht to establish a fascinating somatic paradigm of literature, which emphasizes instinctive empathetic reconstruction of fictional characters as part of reader response… One of the greatest achievements of Robinson’s book is to bring humanity rigorously and explicitly back into literature on the basis of a highly up-to-date theoretical fremework, a reunion that has long been overdue.
(Natasha Grigorian Journal of European Studies)
Among the many virtues of Douglas Robinson’s stunning new book is the fact that his three theorists, the world-class provocatuers Leo Tolstoy, Viktor Shklovsky, and Bertold Brecht, are also primary creators. They are at home in abstract systems, but each in his heart…
(Comparative Literature Studies)
Precise and impressive attention to scholarly detail.
(CLCWEB: Comparative Literature and Culture)
About the Author
Douglas Robinson is a professor of English at the University of Mississippi.