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Unspeakable Subjects: The Genealogy of the Event in Early Modern Europe

Unspeakable Subjects: The Genealogy of the Event in Early Modern Europe in Bloomington, MN
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In groundbreaking readings linking works of Descartes, Shakespeare, and Cervantes with contemporary revisions of Freud and Nietzsche,
Unspeakable Subjects
argues that the concepts and discourses that have come to define European modernity—the subject's extension and responsibility, genealogies of intention and of freedom, the literary, legal, and medical construction of the body, among others—arise as strategies for evading a profound redefinition of the nature of
events
in early modern Europe.
Negotiating the often competing claims of rhetorical reading and cultural analysis, Lezra reassesses the grounds of literary and philosophical history as a materialist practice of eventful reading. His original accounts of
Don Quixote
, Descartes's
Second Meditation
and
Regulae
, and
Measure for Measure
tack between linguistic, psychoanalytic, and cultural materialist approaches to define and discuss the double aspect of the event in early modern literature and philosophy, and in Freudian and Heideggerian critical discourse: the event is at once an accident, the unpredictable, deontic intrusion of the empirical in idealizing schemes,
the disclosing and recollecting of a subject's relation to discursive and cultural morphologies in which empirical events are said properly to take place.
The advent of "modernity,"
argues, arises as the novel account of the permanently interrupted negotiation between the event's deontic and its morphological aspects. If
considers on this level the "singularities" of textual events, it also seeks to show their complex relation to the "singularities" of the forms given material history.
Drawing upon such varied sources as the proclamations of James I, the law of entail, Renaissance treatises on typography, and documents on Jacobean and Elizabethan privateering, as well as accounts of the "events" of May 1968 and of Lacan's treatment of the
fort-da
game, and of the cultural uses of the figure of Don Quixote in Spanish proto-Falangist thought, the author shows that the institutional setting and conditions for literary and philosophical speech-acts, and the graphic constraints upon the bodies that such acts support, also take shape according to patterns set in response to the instability of the event.
Unspeakable Subjects
argues that the concepts and discourses that have come to define European modernity—the subject's extension and responsibility, genealogies of intention and of freedom, the literary, legal, and medical construction of the body, among others—arise as strategies for evading a profound redefinition of the nature of
events
in early modern Europe.
Negotiating the often competing claims of rhetorical reading and cultural analysis, Lezra reassesses the grounds of literary and philosophical history as a materialist practice of eventful reading. His original accounts of
Don Quixote
, Descartes's
Second Meditation
and
Regulae
, and
Measure for Measure
tack between linguistic, psychoanalytic, and cultural materialist approaches to define and discuss the double aspect of the event in early modern literature and philosophy, and in Freudian and Heideggerian critical discourse: the event is at once an accident, the unpredictable, deontic intrusion of the empirical in idealizing schemes,
the disclosing and recollecting of a subject's relation to discursive and cultural morphologies in which empirical events are said properly to take place.
The advent of "modernity,"
argues, arises as the novel account of the permanently interrupted negotiation between the event's deontic and its morphological aspects. If
considers on this level the "singularities" of textual events, it also seeks to show their complex relation to the "singularities" of the forms given material history.
Drawing upon such varied sources as the proclamations of James I, the law of entail, Renaissance treatises on typography, and documents on Jacobean and Elizabethan privateering, as well as accounts of the "events" of May 1968 and of Lacan's treatment of the
fort-da
game, and of the cultural uses of the figure of Don Quixote in Spanish proto-Falangist thought, the author shows that the institutional setting and conditions for literary and philosophical speech-acts, and the graphic constraints upon the bodies that such acts support, also take shape according to patterns set in response to the instability of the event.