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The imperative to write: destitutions of the sublime in Kafka, Blanchot, and Beckett (First edition.)

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Is writing haunted by a categorical imperative? Does the Kantian sublime continue to shape the writer's vocation, even for twentieth-century authors? What precise shape, form, or figure does this residue of sublimity take in the fictions that follow from itand that leave it in ruins?
This book explores these questions through readings of three authors who bear witness to an ambiguous exigency: writing as a demanding and exclusive task, at odds with life, but also a mere compulsion, a drive without end or reason, even a kind of torture. If Kafka, Blanchot, and Beckett mimic a sublime vocation in their extreme devotion to writing, they do so in full awareness that the trajectory it dictates leads not to metaphysical redemption but rather downward, into the uncanny element of fiction. As this book argues, the sublime has always been a deeply melancholy affair, even in its classical Kantian form, but it is in the attenuated speech of narrative voices
progressively stripped of their resources and rewards that the true nature of this melancholy is revealed.

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£87.00
Product Details
Fordham University Press
0823254712 / 9780823254712
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
809
03/03/2014
English
424 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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