- 150 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
"The people are missing" is a constant refrain in Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari's writings after the 1975 publication of Kafka: Pour une litterature mineure. With the translation of this work into English ( Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature ) in 1986, the refrain quickly became a hallmark of political interpretation in the North American academy and was especially applied to the works of minorities and postcolonial writers. However, in the second cinema book, Cinéma 2: L'Image-temps, the refrain is restricted to third-world cinema, in which Deleuze and Guattari locate the conditions of truly postwar political cinema: the absence, even the impossibility, of a people who would constitute its organic community. In this critical reflection, Gregg Lambert traces the "narrowing" of the refrain itself, as well as the premise that the act of art is capable of inventing the conditions of a "people" or a "nation, " and asks whether this results only in reducing the positive conditions of art and philosophy in the postmodern period. Lambert offers an unprecedented inquiry into the evolution of Deleuze's hopes for the revolutionary goals of minor literature and the related notion of the missing people in the conjuncture of contemporary critical theory.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Provocations
- 1. The Axiom of Political Interpretation
- 2. The Principle of âAnti-interpretationâ
- 3. The Tautology of Literary History
- 4. The Ethical Duty of the Writer and the Critic
- 5. The Weakness of the Moral Analogy
- 6. The Final Sense of the Refrain
- Year 2021: Minor Literature Today
- Notes
- About Gregg Lambert
- Series List