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"Revolution in Poetic Language" Fifty Years Later

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Revisits Julia Kristeva's magnum opus on the fiftieth anniversary of its original publication to open up new paths of interdisciplinary inquiry.In her 1974 Revolution in Poetic Language, Julia Kris...
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  • 02 January 2025
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Revisits Julia Kristeva's magnum opus on the fiftieth anniversary of its original publication to open up new paths of interdisciplinary inquiry.

In her 1974 Revolution in Poetic Language, Julia Kristeva resisted the abstract use of language, with its aim of totalization and finality, in all its colonizing and alienating forms. A major thinker and critic, Kristeva reappropriated Hegel's concepts of desire and negativity, in conjunction with the thought of Heidegger, Arendt, Freud, and Lacan, to revolt against modernity's culture of nihilism and the West's inability to deal with loss. This collection celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of Revolution in Poetic Language by revisiting Kristeva's oeuvre and establishing exciting new directions in Kristeva studies. Engaging with queer and transgender studies, disability studies, decolonial studies, and more, renowned and rising scholars plot continuities in-and push the boundaries of-Kristeva's thinking about loss, revolution, and revolt. The volume also includes two essays by Kristeva, translated into English for the first time here-"The Impossibility of Loss" (1988) and "Of What Use Are Poets in Times of Distress?" (2016).

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Price: £27.00
Pages: 329
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Gender Theory
Publication Date: 02 January 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781438498041
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

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"With its intellectual breadth, originality, and erudition, this anthology offers readers far more than a rigorous reevaluation of Revolution in Poetic Language within the corpus of Kristeva's intellectual history. It also critically and imaginatively reconceptualizes Kristeva's text to address the most pressing political, philosophical, and psychoanalytic debates of our own historical moment. A wide range of scholarly communities—including both new and longstanding readers of Kristeva—will find fresh ideas, provocative insights, and critical interventions." — Ewa Plonowska Ziarek, coauthor of Arendt, Natality and Biopolitics: Toward Democratic Plurality and Reproductive Justice

Editor's Acknowledgments

Introduction: Revolutionary Practice and the Subject-in-Process
Emilia Angelova

Part One: Two New Texts by Kristeva

1. Editor's Introduction to Julia Kristeva's "The Impossibility of Loss" (1988)
Emilia Angelova

2. The Impossibility of Loss
Julia Kristeva, translated by Elisabeth Paquette

3. Of What Use Are Poets in Times of Distress?
Julia Kristeva, translated by Elisabeth Paquette and Alice Jardine

Part Two Beyond Feminism: Engaging Kristeva for Decolonial, Trans, and Disability Studies

4. Julia Kristeva's Maternal Ethics of Tenderness
Kelly Oliver

5. Kristeva in a Trans Poetic Frame
Sid Hansen

6. Stranger than Other Strangers: On the Crossroads between Subjectivity and Language in Kristeva and Anzaldúa
Fanny Söderbäck

7. Theories of Poetic Resistance: Julia Kristeva and Sylvia Wynter
Elisabeth Paquette

8. Proust among the Patients: Kristeva on Proust, Psychoanalysis, and Politics
Elaine P. Miller

Part Three The Evolving Meaning of Ontological Loss: From Revolution to Revolt

9. From Praxis to Chōra: The Filter of (In)Humanization in Julia Kristeva's Early Work
Miglena Nikolchina

10. The Mental Image and the Spectacular Imaginary: Kristeva with Lacan and Sartre
Surti Singh

11. Rhythm and the Semiotic in Revolution in Poetic Language
John Montani

12. Excription and the Negativity of the Speaking Subject: Reading Kristeva with Heidegger
Emilia Angelova

13. Kristeva and Arendt on Language, Sanity, and the Sensus Communis
Anne O'Byrne

About the Contributors
Index