Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
2017
…
8 pages
1 file
AI-generated Abstract
This conference report examines the themes of literature and institutions, highlighting discussions on how literature serves both as an institutional force and a means of disruption. Key topics include the interplay between literature and globalization, the impact of consumer psychology on literature's status, and the institutionalization of literary forms. Notable presentations explored gendered reading initiatives, the cultural transformations during translation, and the evolving aesthetics brought about by new media.
The two-day symposium investigated the entanglements between literature and institutions, offering examples and case studies from a broad range of historical and cultural contexts.
A B S T R A C T This article proposes a structural history of the transformations of modes of consecration in the literary field, taking France as an exemplary case study. My approach combines Bourdieu's field theory with Abbott's analysis of professional development. The mechanisms of consecration must be contextualized within the political and economic constraints that the literary field is subjected to. Because of its relatively weak professional development, the consecrating authorities play a major role in the regulating of the literary field and in the building of careers. This article examines literary institutions which appear in different periods: the Académie française, which obtained its power from the state under the Old Regime; the societies of authors and the publishers, which contributed to the professional development of literary activity with the growth of the book market and the withdrawal of the state from the control of this market; the literary journals as relatively autonomous authorities; the literary prizes that are torn between autonomy and heteronomy (with the Goncourt prize as an example); the role of translation and international circulation in the process of consecration; and finally, the festival as a new form of literary recognition, which reflects the process of democratization (based on an empirical study on Les Correspondances de Manosque).
Literary Cultures and …, 2011
This book set out to discuss the relevance of the notion of public opinion to the study of the literary culture of an early modern society. We advanced a pragmatic understanding of that notion in dealing with several related aspects of public life in any given society, and certainly so in such greatly developed regions as the Low Countries. The high level of organization in public life in these countries was epitomized in the well-developed network of print and bookshops and the networks of the chambers of rhetoric, institutions of performative literary culture that stood at the crossroads of various local, regional and supraregional circles. The rhetoricians maintained tight-knit networks on various levels through their regular exercises, their involvement in local and interurban festive culture, and the organization of (supra-) regional festive literary contests. The chambers were the institutional heart of a much broader civic culture in the core regions of the Low Countries and literary practices were an essential part of that culture. The supranational respublica literaria was in many ways linked to the worlds of print, rhetoricians' culture and performative literature. The learned humanists of this Latinized world maintained international networks, witness the many vast correspondences that have been preserved in manuscript and print. For humanists and vernacular rhetoricians alike, literary practices were essential, and both groups spread news and aimed to influence the views of friends and fellow citizens.
Studies in Eighteenth Century Culture, 1998
Cultural Sociology, 2015
Literature is the art form of the nation-state. The written word was at the peak of its influence from the Enlightenment until late in the 20th century. National literatures became central to the development of national identities and the formation of national art worlds. Moreover, they were important vehicles for the exchange of ideas. However, the central position of the nation-state has dwindled due to the centrifugal effects of globalization and regionalization. Simultaneously, literature has given way to other, mainly visual and digital, cultural forms. In the process, it has lost much of its political clout. Literature seems to pose little or no threat to those groups it may previously have worried, and is of little consequence to elites in the 21st century. Instead, it has become an object of cultural consumption, for dwindling and aging publics.
Sociological Forum, 1991
This paper analyzes a characteristic syndrome of modern literature identified as "anxiety of influence" by literary critics and as "mania for originality" by art historians. Based on a sociological reformulation of the syndrome as it relates to the structure of acknowledged influence, the paper develops and tests several hypotheses. Data are based on a survey of West German writers and are analyzed by using clustering techniques and correspondence analysis. First, the analysis demonstrates the fragmented and non-hierarchical structure of acknowledged literary influence. Second, the different types of influence (absence distinctiveness, and clusterability) correspond to different professional and literary characteristics of writers. Results highlight one of the contradictions between the cultural code and the professional structure of modern art: at the level of ideology, greatness and genius are equated with the absence of influence and artistic uniqueness. The analysis shows, however, that the denial/absence of acknowledged influence is found among writers who are excluded from the professional networks where reputations are made in the world of literature.
Law and Humanities, 2011, n°5, pp. 141-152
A discussion on the impact of Writers like John Milton, John Dryden, Henry Neville and Shakespeare in which they have asked their audience to think like kings and judges is presented. The author opines that that the Law itself is a creation, an invention and a game.
Th eory of Literature t h e ope n ya l e c ou r se s se r i e s is designed to bring the depth and breadth of a Yale education to a wide variety of readers. Based on Yale's Open Yale Courses program (http:// oyc .yale .edu), these books bring outstanding lectures by Yale faculty to the curious reader, whether student or adult. Covering a wide variety of topics across disciplines in the social sciences, physical sciences, and humanities, Open Yale Courses books off er accessible introductions at aff ordable prices. viii Contents Preface xi Marxist attention devoted to textual surface in En gland, with Simon Jarvis, Keston Sutherland, and others micro-reading in the spirit of found er J. H. Prynne, which has only reached American shores as yet in the shape of their promising students. Literary sociology is an emerging fi eld, but my discussion of John Guillory (and mention of Pierre Bourdieu in that context) is not supplemented by any discussion of the important work, for example, of the sociolinguist Michael Silverstein. A formative infl uence on Silverstein is the semiotics of C. S. Peirce; and it must be said that as neo-pragmatist views like those of Knapp and Michaels (discussed here) converge today with attention to the social and cultural circulation of literary knowledge and taste that is modeled on Jürgen Habermas's concept of the "public sphere" even more than on Bourdieu's concept of "habitus," something like a Peirceian tradition of the socially indexical sign has emerged in rivalry with the Saussurian tradition to which these lectures devote most of their attention. A general introduction to the Peirceian tradition has yet to be written, and I hope it will quickly appear. Th e reader will fi nd a few thoughts on this topic at the beginning of my twenty-fi ft h chapter. Th eories of the circulation of knowledge other than those of Foucault, discussed here, and Antonio Gramsci, mentioned in passing, have recently carried scholars into the interrelated fi elds of systems theory (notably Niklas Luhmann), history of media, remediation, and media theory (the classics in this fi eld being works by Marshall McLuhan and Friedrich Kittler), and more specifi cally within these last fi elds the history of the book (as in the work of Peter Stallybrass and David Kastan). All of this and more, then, remains to be covered in another course, and another book. Th e challenge of acknowledging my intellectual debts-my personal ones, I mean, as the written ones fi nd their way for the most part into the bibliographical essay-is overwhelming. I can name here only a few of the people whose conversation and teaching over the years have shaped my understanding of the subject, whether they knew it or not:
BODHI International Journal of Research in Humanities, Arts and Science, 2024
This article explores the pivotal role that various literary theories have played in the institutionalization of literary studies. It argues that these theories have not only formalized the discipline but have also challenged and reshaped its contours. It has employed a historical method, and traces the evolution of literary theories from structuralism and poststructuralism to cultural and critical theory. It also demonstrates how each theoretical movement responded to specific intellectual and cultural contexts and contributed to the establishment of literary studies as a rigorous academic field. The analysis highlights how these theories fostered interdisciplinary connections, expanded the literary canon, and influenced curriculum development, thereby transforming literary studies into a globally recognized and influential discipline. Through a detailed examination of key texts and theoretical developments, the article underscores the necessity of these frameworks in elevating literary analysis and shaping the future of literary scholarship.
Aporia. Revista Internacional de Investigaciones filosoficas, 2021
O livro da toada: uma antologia Caprichoso. 2ª ed, 2024
Filozofski pregled, 2024
The Language and Culture (언어와 문화) - by KLACES, 2009
Encyclopedia of Quality of Life and Well-Being Research, 2014
Holger Gutschmidt, D. Henrichs frühe Selbstbewusstseinstheorie
Theorizing the Italian Diaspora, 2018
II Congreso Internacional de Historia e Historiografía Guanajuatenses, 2015
American Journal of Leadership and Governance
WORLD SCIENTIFIC eBooks, 2002
Cureus, 2021
Psychonomic Science, 1966