Queer optimism : lyric personhood and other felicitous persuasions

著者

    • Snediker, Michael D.

書誌事項

Queer optimism : lyric personhood and other felicitous persuasions

Michael D. Snediker

University of Minnesota Press, c2009

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 219-263) and index

HTTP:URL=http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0824/2008031434.html Information=Table of contents only

収録内容

  • Hart Crane's smile: affirming certain things
  • Emily Dickinson's queer pain: "One claw opon the air"
  • Jack Spicer's Billy the Kid: beyond the singular personal
  • Elizabeth Bishop's crane, and the good-enough poem

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Michael Snediker offers a much-needed counterpoint to queer theoretical discourse, which has long privileged melancholy, self-shattering, incoherence, shame, and the death drive. Recovering the forms of positive affect that queer theory has jettisoned, Snediker insists that optimism must itself be taken beyond conventional tropes of hope and futurity and reimagined as necessary for critical engagement. Through fresh, perceptive, and sensitive readings of the poetry of Emily Dickinson, Hart Crane, Jack Spicer, and Elizabeth Bishop, Snediker reveals that each of these poets demonstrated an interest in the durability of positive affects. Dickinson, Snediker argues, expresses joy and grace as much as pain and loss, and the myriad cryptic smiles in Hart Crane's White Building contradict prevailing narratives of Crane's apocryphal literary failures and eventual suicide. Snediker's ambitious and sophisticated study, informed by thinkers such as Winnicott, Deleuze, and de Man, both supplements and challenges the work of queer theory's leading figures, including Judith Butler, Leo Bersani, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, and Lee Edelman. Queer Optimism revises our understanding of queer love and affiliation, examining Spicer's serial collusion with matinee idol Billy the Kid as well as the critically neglected force of Bishop's epistolary and poetic reparations of the drowned figure of Hart Crane. In doing so, Snediker persuasively reconceives a theoretical field of optimism that was previously unavailable to scrupulous critical inquiry and provides a groundbreaking approach to modern American poetry and poetics.

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