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BestsellerE-book
Author Booker, M. Keith.

Title Literature and domination : sex, knowledge, and power in modern fiction / M. Keith Booker.

Publication Info. Gainesville : University Press of Florida, [1993]
©1993

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (188 pages)
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary Employing thc theoretical resources provided by cultural critics such as Adorno, Jameson, Althusser, and Foucault, M. Keith Booker examines the treatment of issues of power and domination in modern literature. Discussing texts such as Virginia Woolf's The Waves, Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita, Thomas Pynchon's V., and Italo Calvino's If on a winter's night a traveler, Booker focuses on gender relations as a locus of struggles for power in human relations generally. He also pays special attention to the work of Samuel Beckett, reading the novels Watt and The Lost Ones to explore the issues of power and domination in an Irish cultural context. For all of the texts read, such issues are explored in terms not only of content but of style and form. What is distinctive about many modern texts, Booker claims, is the reflexive way literary meditations on power, authority, and domination turn inward to involve examinations of textuality and reading as images of the kinds of struggles for mastery that inform society at large. Booker suggests that literary knowledge is of a different order than the traditional theoretical knowledge that is equated with power in the West. "Literature has the potential to explore and illuminate objects of inquiry in a mode of dialogue and performance rather than by seeking to dominate them in the traditional mode of science," he writes. "Especially in the difficult and complex texts of modern literature, successful reading requires that readers and texts work together, pointing toward ways the human drive for mastery can be fulfilled through cooperation rather than through demanding the submission of some Other who is being mastered or dominated."
Contents Introduction: Literature and Domination -- 1. This Is Not a Pot: The Assault on Scientific Language in Samuel Beckett's Watt -- 2. Tradition, Authority, and Subjectivity: Narrative Constitution of the Self in The Waves -- 3. Adorno, Althusser, and Humbert Humbert: Nabokov's Lolita as Neo-Marxist Critique of Bourgeois Subjectivity -- 4. Mastery and Sexual Domination: Imperialism as Rape in Pynchon's V. -- 5. Who's the Boss? Reader, Author, and Text in Calvino's If on a winter's night a traveler -- 6. Against Epistemology in Reading and Teaching: The Failure of Interpretive Mastery in Beckett's The Lost Ones.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Fiction -- 20th century -- History and criticism.
Fiction.
Chronological Term 20th century
Subject Dominance (Psychology) in literature.
Dominance (Psychology) in literature.
Sex role in literature.
Sex role in literature.
Power (Social sciences) in literature.
Power (Social sciences) in literature.
Chronological Term 1900 - 1999
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Spine Title Literature & domination
Other Form: Print version: Booker, M. Keith. Literature and domination. Gainesville : University Press of Florida, ©1993 0813011957 (DLC) 92041442 (OCoLC)27150511
ISBN 0813019133 (electronic book)
9780813019130 (electronic book)
0813011957 (acid-free paper)