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N. Buchweitz, An Officer of Civilization. The Poetics of Michel Houellebecq

N. Buchweitz, An Officer of Civilization. The Poetics of Michel Houellebecq

Publié le par Marc Escola (Source : Samuel Estier)

Référence bibliographique : Nurit Buchweitz, An Officer of Civilization. The Poetics of Michel Houellebecq, Peter Lang, 2015. EAN13 : 9783034315814.

 

 

Michel Houellebecq posits himself as an officer of civilization, offering a map of contemporary reality and according literature a substantial role in the field of public involvement. His unique stype problematizes contemporary cultural processes and deconstructs the aesthetic and ideological thought-habits that design the collective imaginary of our era. As such, this book seeks to analyze the particularities of Houellebecq's poetics in the context of literary tradition, intertextual relations, psycho-cultural aspects and social semiotics, alongside contacts with the contemporary field of art. The author focuses on Houellebecq's poetical differentia specifica, the unique and innovative intersection between the cooperation with transnation capitalism and the resentment toward ignorant indulgence in it. This book reads Houellebecq as both iconoclastic and subversive and at the same time as a commodity in the literary marketplace and shows how his narrative are harnessed for the purpose of activism in the service of engaged impact.

 

Contents: The Map, the Territory and the Poetics: Introduction - Passive-Activism: A Modular Narration - Familiarity, Kinship, and the Autobiographical Topos - Visions of the Future, Persistence of the Real: A Quest - Art, Literature, and the Market: The Viewer/Reader as Voyeur - The Cult of Happiness: A Gnostic Theology - Pornography and the Post-human

 

Nurit Buchweitz is a Senior Lecturer of Comparative Literature at Beit Berl College in Israel. She has previously published the books Permit to Pass: Generation Shift, Meir Wiezeltier and the Poetry of the 1960s (2008, Hebrew); In Other[s] Words: Studies in Hebrew and Arabic Literature (2010, Hebrew); Sensational Visual Pleasures in Cinema, Literature and Visual Culture: the Phallic Eye (2014).