艺术、理论、革命:米彻姆·休尔斯当代文学向普遍性的转向(书评)

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW Pub Date : 2023-10-01 DOI:10.1353/mlr.2023.a907848
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Chapter 1 is concerned with 'Art, Life-Writing, and the Generic', focusing on Sheila Heti and Chris Kraus, arguing that they explore 'the problem of being a person in the world' and reconceive the 'nature of female selfhood' (p. 40). Chapter 2 turns to 'Theory, Metafiction, and Constructivism', asking the question that, if theory is 'supposedly dead', why is it still so 'alive and well in contemporary fiction?' (p. 75). Finally, Chapter 3 gets to grips with 'Revolution, Historical Fiction, and Gesture', to propose that Peter Carey, Viet Nguyen, Dana Spiotta, and other writers of recent historical fiction use 'their own forms of realism to think through the formal impasses that beset the various revolutionary activities that their content comprises' (p. 113). As I hinted above, what Huehls does, in a hopelessly but I think accurately reductive reading, is question the bond or the strength of the bond formed between two terms by their hyphenation. In other words, if the postmodern period promised, threatened, or teased a deconstruction of the art-politics homology, it did so by dissolving the connective tissue, as it were, the point of contact. And yet, Huehls argues, another form of looser relations was maintained, not by anything as vague as a 'trace', but simply by prior entanglement; in a sense, new forms of freedom—aesthetic, political, and aesthetico-political—arose in the space vacated: this form was the 'general'. The work is ambitious, but because it is grounded in close attention to textual examples the ideas are lucid and convincing (more so as the chapters get under way). Huehls concludes, compellingly, that the writers studied here start from 'the assumption that there is no necessary link between form and politics', and turn to a more general 'ad hoc approach to value' (human, political, aesthetic, etc.) (p. 153). In some ways, of course, this is simply a reformulation of the modernist or even the founding aestheticist concept of l'art pour l'art. In a series of exemplary texts, then, Huehls has composed a work of literary theory with broad appeal, and his insights...","PeriodicalId":45399,"journal":{"name":"MODERN LANGUAGE REVIEW","volume":"63 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Art, Theory, Revolution: The Turn to Generality in Contemporary Literature by Mitchum Huehls (review)\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/mlr.2023.a907848\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Reviewed by: Art, Theory, Revolution: The Turn to Generality in Contemporary Literature by Mitchum Huehls Peter Sloane Art, Theory, Revolution: The Turn to Generality in Contemporary Literature. By Mitchum Huehls. 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Either one of these might warrant a monograph, [End Page 598] but the point of Huehls's study is that these interrogations work together to give rise to a peculiarly post-postmodern set of entanglements between art, theory, and revolution. Intriguingly, as I suggest below, though this is not stated explicitly, the study is fundamentally interested in the work performed by the hyphen in these two conjunctions, the relationships, dependencies, and linkages implied by that, and by its possible erasure or refiguration. The Introduction is extensive, wide-ranging, and if at times hard to follow because it goes in at the deep end, worth reading closely because the theoretical framework is both rewarding in itself and vital if sense is to made of the following chapters. Much of the hard work takes place here, Huehls outlining the case that he will reinforce in his Conclusion, that his subjects 'develop generalized forms of value production irreducible' to the 'homological thought' of their predecessors in the modernist or pre-modernist periods (p. 153). Chapter 1 is concerned with 'Art, Life-Writing, and the Generic', focusing on Sheila Heti and Chris Kraus, arguing that they explore 'the problem of being a person in the world' and reconceive the 'nature of female selfhood' (p. 40). Chapter 2 turns to 'Theory, Metafiction, and Constructivism', asking the question that, if theory is 'supposedly dead', why is it still so 'alive and well in contemporary fiction?' (p. 75). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

书评:《艺术、理论、革命:当代文学的普遍性转向》,作者:米彻姆·休尔斯,彼得·斯隆米彻姆·赫尔斯著。哥伦布:俄亥俄州立大学出版社,2022。198页,69.95美元。ISBN 978-0-8142-1524-1。米彻姆·休尔斯对当代文学形式和政治之间的关系进行了深刻的思考和哲学上的敏锐研究,更具体地说,在后时期,随着各种有趣的、经常被夸大的虚无主义和后现代主义的结束,他给自己设置了一个困难的挑战。一方面,他提出了一系列复杂的主张,关于当前文学小说继续利用形式的各种抵抗(甚至抵抗本身)的潜力的方式,通过参与他所描述的“形式-政治同源性”(第6页);另一方面,在一系列深刻的亲密的他选择的细节而克里斯•克劳斯珀西瓦尔埃弗雷特、扎迪·史密斯,和瑞秋Kushner-he认为一些人而不是“转向single-general关系”(p。6)。其中一个可能需要一个专著(页598)但Huehls的研究的重点是,这些审讯共同产生一组post-postmodern特有的艺术之间的纠葛,理论,和革命。有趣的是,正如我下面建议的那样,尽管没有明确说明,但这项研究从根本上对这两个连词中的连字符所做的工作感兴趣,它所隐含的关系、依赖和联系,以及它可能的删除或重构。导论内容广泛,涉及面广,虽然有时很难理解,但值得仔细阅读,因为它的理论框架本身就很有价值,而且对于后面的章节也很有意义。许多艰苦的工作发生在这里,Huehls概述了他将在结论中强调的情况,即他的主体“发展了不可简化的价值生产的一般形式”,与他们在现代主义或前现代主义时期的前辈的“同质思想”(第153页)。第一章是关于“艺术,生活写作和一般”,重点关注希拉·海蒂和克里斯·克劳斯,认为他们探索了“在世界上成为一个人的问题”,并重新认识了“女性自我的本质”(第40页)。第二章转向“理论、元小说和建构主义”,提出了这样一个问题:如果理论“被认为已经死亡”,为什么它在当代小说中仍然如此“活跃”?(第75页)。最后,第三章讨论了“革命、历史小说和姿态”,提出彼得·凯里、阮越、达纳·斯皮奥塔和其他近代历史小说作家使用“他们自己的现实主义形式来思考围绕着他们的内容所包含的各种革命活动的形式僵局”(第113页)。正如我上面所暗示的,Huehls所做的,在一种无望但我认为准确的简化解读中,是质疑两个术语之间通过连字符形成的联系或联系的强度。换句话说,如果后现代时期承诺、威胁或嘲弄对艺术-政治同源性的解构,那么它是通过溶解结缔组织来实现的,就像它是接触点一样。然而,Huehls认为,另一种形式的松散关系得以维持,不是通过像“痕迹”这样模糊的东西,而是通过先前的纠缠;从某种意义上说,新的自由形式——美学的、政治的和美学-政治的——在空出来的空间中出现了:这种形式是“普遍的”。这项工作是雄心勃勃的,但因为它是建立在密切关注文本例子的基础上的,所以思想清晰而令人信服(随着章节的进行,更令人信服)。休尔斯令人信服地得出结论,这里研究的作家从“形式与政治之间没有必要联系的假设”开始,转向更普遍的“价值特设方法”(人性、政治、美学等)(第153页)。当然,在某种程度上,这只是对现代主义的重新表述,甚至是对“为艺术而艺术”的美学概念的重新表述。因此,在一系列典范文本中,休尔斯创作了一部具有广泛吸引力的文学理论作品,他的见解……
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Art, Theory, Revolution: The Turn to Generality in Contemporary Literature by Mitchum Huehls (review)
Reviewed by: Art, Theory, Revolution: The Turn to Generality in Contemporary Literature by Mitchum Huehls Peter Sloane Art, Theory, Revolution: The Turn to Generality in Contemporary Literature. By Mitchum Huehls. Columbus: Ohio State University Press. 2022. 198 pp. $69.95. ISBN 978–0–8142–1524–1. Mitchum Huehls sets himself a difficult challenge in his deeply thoughtful and philosophically astute study of the relationship between literary form and politics in the contemporary period, more specifically the post-period following the various playful and often exaggerated nihilisms and endings attendant on the postmodern. On the one hand he makes a sophisticated series of claims about the ways in which current literary fiction continues to exploit forms' potential for various kinds of resistance (even to resistance itself) by engaging with what he describes as the 'form-politics homology' (p. 6); on the other, in a series of insightful close readings of the specifics of his chosen figures—including Chris Kraus, Percival Everett, Zadie Smith, and Rachel Kushner—he argues that some have instead 'turned to the single-general relationship' (p. 6). Either one of these might warrant a monograph, [End Page 598] but the point of Huehls's study is that these interrogations work together to give rise to a peculiarly post-postmodern set of entanglements between art, theory, and revolution. Intriguingly, as I suggest below, though this is not stated explicitly, the study is fundamentally interested in the work performed by the hyphen in these two conjunctions, the relationships, dependencies, and linkages implied by that, and by its possible erasure or refiguration. The Introduction is extensive, wide-ranging, and if at times hard to follow because it goes in at the deep end, worth reading closely because the theoretical framework is both rewarding in itself and vital if sense is to made of the following chapters. Much of the hard work takes place here, Huehls outlining the case that he will reinforce in his Conclusion, that his subjects 'develop generalized forms of value production irreducible' to the 'homological thought' of their predecessors in the modernist or pre-modernist periods (p. 153). Chapter 1 is concerned with 'Art, Life-Writing, and the Generic', focusing on Sheila Heti and Chris Kraus, arguing that they explore 'the problem of being a person in the world' and reconceive the 'nature of female selfhood' (p. 40). Chapter 2 turns to 'Theory, Metafiction, and Constructivism', asking the question that, if theory is 'supposedly dead', why is it still so 'alive and well in contemporary fiction?' (p. 75). Finally, Chapter 3 gets to grips with 'Revolution, Historical Fiction, and Gesture', to propose that Peter Carey, Viet Nguyen, Dana Spiotta, and other writers of recent historical fiction use 'their own forms of realism to think through the formal impasses that beset the various revolutionary activities that their content comprises' (p. 113). As I hinted above, what Huehls does, in a hopelessly but I think accurately reductive reading, is question the bond or the strength of the bond formed between two terms by their hyphenation. In other words, if the postmodern period promised, threatened, or teased a deconstruction of the art-politics homology, it did so by dissolving the connective tissue, as it were, the point of contact. And yet, Huehls argues, another form of looser relations was maintained, not by anything as vague as a 'trace', but simply by prior entanglement; in a sense, new forms of freedom—aesthetic, political, and aesthetico-political—arose in the space vacated: this form was the 'general'. The work is ambitious, but because it is grounded in close attention to textual examples the ideas are lucid and convincing (more so as the chapters get under way). Huehls concludes, compellingly, that the writers studied here start from 'the assumption that there is no necessary link between form and politics', and turn to a more general 'ad hoc approach to value' (human, political, aesthetic, etc.) (p. 153). In some ways, of course, this is simply a reformulation of the modernist or even the founding aestheticist concept of l'art pour l'art. In a series of exemplary texts, then, Huehls has composed a work of literary theory with broad appeal, and his insights...
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