American letters

Bibliographic Information

American letters

Claude Richard ; translated with an afterword by Carol Mastrangelo Bové ; foreword by Marc Chénetier, Michel Gresset, and Philippe Jaworski

University of Pennsylvania Press, c1998

Other Title

Lettres américaines : essais

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [179]-187) and index

Original French language edition copyright: c1987 Editions Alinea

Description and Table of Contents

Description

At his death in 1988, Claude Richard was one of the most active French scholars working at the confluence of American literary history and critical theory. His last writings, translated here for the first time, offer an incisive reading of American literature that finds Poe at its center and traces new lines of continuity between the works of the nineteenth century and those of contemporary writers such as Thomas Pynchon. In American Letters, Richard uses the writings of such theorists as Derrida, Lacan, Deleuze, and Serres as a means to demonstrate the essential modernity of American literature from Poe onward. His readings of Poe's detective stories, Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, Melville's Moby Dick, Thoreau's Walden, and Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 focus on the transmission of various sorts of letters as signifiers in the act of communication. Whether discussing the letter as alphabetic or hieroglyphic, as natural or cultural, as transmitted within envelopes or written upon the bodies of whales or sailors, Richard insists that the question of American letters is "the question of the letter, of the text, of writing."

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