The Politics of Aesthetics: Nationalism, Gender, Romanticism

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Stanford University Press, 2003 - Literary Criticism - 252 pages
This book suggests that modern cultural and critical institutions have persistently associated questions of aesthetics and politics with literature, theory, technics, and Romanticism. Its first section examines aesthetic nationalism and the figure of the body, focusing on writings by Benedict Anderson, J. G. Fichte, and Matthew Arnold, and arguing that uneasy acts of aestheticization (of media technology) and abjection (of the maternal body) undergird the production of the national body as imagined community. Subsequent chapters on Paul de Man, Friedrich Schlegel, and Percy Shelley explore the career of the gendered body in the aesthetic tradition and the relationship among aesthetics, technics, politics, and figurative language. The author accounts for the hysteria that has characterized media representations of theory, explains why and how Romanticism has remained a locus of extravagant political hopes and anxieties, and, in a sequence of close readings, uncovers the anaesthetic condition of possibility of the politics of aesthetics.

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Contents

The Imagined Community
45
The Body
74
De Man Schiller and the Politics of Reception
95
Lucindes Obscenity
125
Shelleys Political Poetics
148
Aesthetics Romanticism Politics
173
Notes
183
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About the author (2003)

Marc Redfield is Professor of English and holder of the John and Lillian Maguire Distinguished Chair in the Humanities at the Claremont Graduate University.

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