The Living Prism
Itineraries in Comparative Literature
Format:Paperback
Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press
Published:23rd May '02
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A fascinating look at comparative literature and its recent evolution across languages and cultures.
In The Living Prism Eva Kushner provides a lively panorama of reflections and experiences in comparative literature studies, showing that comparative literature in the post-World War II era has been an experimental ground for the human sciences.To play an important role in the human sciences, comparative literature had first to free itself of a number of restrictive habits, such as an insufficiently critical literary history. In order to do this, it had to think theoretically, but without yielding to the temptation of letting theory become an end in itself. Kushner demonstrates that, while under strong pressures to be a more rigorous science, comparative literature has realized that in the human sciences the validation of knowledge has to seek its own tests and criteria, becoming increasingly more open to individuality, difference and life situations, and controlling its tendency to universalize. With its emphasis on whether literary history is possible and the problems it raises for literary theory and for comparative literature in particular, The Living Prism adds an important dimension to the ongoing debate about criticism and comparative literary studies.
"The Living Prism provides the reader with a comparative perspective on the contemporary literary scene in North America. It adds to the usual critical fare the missing international dimension. It also refreshingly and positively reevaluates Renaissance and early modern studies, rescuing them from the view that only what pertains to the twentieth century is worthwhile spending time on." Francesco Loriggio, Institute for Comparative Studies in Literature, Art and Culture, Carleton University
ISBN: 9780773522084
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
360 pages