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Powers of Reading: From Plato to Audiobooks

قوى القراءة: من أفلاطون إلى الكتب الصوتية

Not Translated

A historical, literary, and philosophical study that transforms our understanding of reading "Peter Szendy offers a subtle, persuasive, and unprecedented account of the time of reading and its scene of address, one that is as archaic as it is contemporary. When we read, are we listening to a voice or being read to? If it is not a private and monologic exercise, how do we understand the populated scene of reading? What reads when we read, and how does reading push and pull between temporalities and voices? Why do we keep leaving the text when we seek to obey the injunction to stay within its terms? Questions such as these produce a fresh, even startling, consideration of a wide range of literary and popular texts, including Hobbes’ Leviathan, Flaubert’s Madame Bovary, Kant’s moral injunctions, Sade, Valéry, Blanchot, and de Certeau, but also modern fiction, film, audiobooks, and hypertext. The power of reading turns out to belong to its surprising engagement with time and direction: the deliberate reader stays close but strays, tries to fill in the gaps but gets pushed back by a countercurrent. The key to the text is sought ‘outside’ only to be led back to the text and its failure to deliver a final answer. Equally at odds with older versions of literary formalism that insist on the self-referentiality of the text as well as contextualists who scour an external social order to discover the truth of the text, Szendy approaches that very conflict as an oscillation constitutive of reading itself. Paradoxically, reading is sustained precisely by what interrupts its teleological flow.

Powers of Reading: From Plato to Audiobooks

Bibliographic Data

Author
PublisherBook Zone logoWebsite
Publisher Addressmgale@zonebooks.org
CountryUSA
Also In
LanguageEnglish (EN)
Pages208 pages
Editionfirst
Dimensions5×9
ISBN978-1942130963
Translation
Not Translated

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