logo

icon

icon

icon

icon

icon

  • Books
    • Back Close
    • Academic
      • Back Close
      • Subjects
      • Series
    • Non Fiction
      • Back Close
      • Non-Fiction
      • Anthem Essential Knowledge
    • Education
      • Back Close
      • Anthem Advanced Learning
      • Anthem SCAT Series
      • Other Education
    • Professional
  • Products
    • Back Close
    • Anthem Advanced Introductions
    • Anthem Impact
    • Anthem Enviroexperts Review
    • Anthem Handbooks
    • Partnership Publishing
    • Anthem Editions
    • First Hill Books
  • Author Hub
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Blog
Search
WORK WITH USOPEN ACCESSRIGHTS & PERMISSIONSPRIVACY & COOKIES POLICYTERMS & CONDITIONSACCESSIBILITY
CATALOGUESBOOKSELLERSLIBRARIANSREVIEWERSINSTRUCTORSPARTNERSHIP PUBLISHING
SALES REPRESENTATIONORDERING EBOOKSSHIPPING: NORTH AMERICAShipping: UK, EU & ROWShipping: Australia & NZ

Copyright © 2025 Anthem Press. Registered in England & Wales under No. 02889958.

HomeLiteratureElegy for Literature
Elegy for Literature
Flyer Cover
Google Review

Elegy for Literature

Jeffrey T. Nealon

Anthem Impact



Title Details

ISBN: 9781839983955

Pages: 68

Pub Date: March 2022

Imprint: Anthem Press

Request for Desk or Exam copyAdd to Cart

Related Books

Paperback

£20.99 / $24.99

E-Book (PDF)

E-Book (EPUB)

With the seemingly unshakeable ground of literature having suffered a number of near-fatal hemorrhages due to the changing mediascape and the temblors of 2008 and 2020, the author suggests for the future of literary studies: Not Theory of Literature, but Literature as Theory. Not literary studies as putting on offer familiarity with a series of privileged literary texts and their prized cultural “meaning,” nor transmuting theory into one of those canonical texts, but literary studies as a kind of theoretical orientation, a series of modes of response or ways of doing things.

The external threats for literary study today are easy enough to recognize – the pressure from above exerted by downsizing administrators and neoliberal apologists who see literary study as frivolous at best, dangerous to the university’s new vocational mission at worst. The academic study of literature requires an elegy primarily because its object doesn’t unproblematically exist anymore: which is to say, we have to come to terms with the fact that there is not (and never has been) a way to locate what literature is, or what it can do, without the preexisting condition of a theoretical orientation. Literature as an autonomous object of inquiry is dead. Long live theory.

Bengal Partition Stories
Govind Narayan's Mumbai
Decadent Verse
John Keble in Context
Dostoevsky and the Dynamics of Religious Experience
Dostoevsky's The Idiot and the Ethical Foundations of Narrative