Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781501781162 Academic Inspection Copy

Textual Entanglements

Handke, Bernhard, Rilke, and the Materiality of Literature
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Google
Preview
Textual Entanglements explores how the material processes of writing manifest in the published works of three twentieth-century Austrian authors: Peter Handke, Thomas Bernhard, and Rainer Maria Rilke. These authors left behind material traces of their writing processes, whether in notebooks, piles of disorganized typewritten sheets, or manuscript fragments. The materials do not merely act as containers for their texts: They spill into the semantic content of the writing, becoming entangled in it. The idiosyncratic materials and methods of the writing process do not disappear when the work enters print. Examining these material traces, Textual Entanglements contends that we cannot fully understand these texts' semantic dynamics without considering the material circumstances of their production. Jacob Haubenreich reads Handke, Bernhard, and Rilke to argue that the materiality of textual production opens up a broader semiotic field in which meaning can be created. Haubenreich's book offers a theoretical framework and methodological models for integrating analysis of textual materiality into literary analysis in ways that expand the boundaries of literary interpretation.
Jacob Haubenreich is Assistant Professor of German at Johns Hopkins University.
0. Introduction 1. Handke's Slow Making 2. Bernhard's Destructive Production 3. Rilke's Embodied Figuration Epilogue: Studying Material Process in the Age of Digitization
Google Preview content