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Chapter 6 - Between Language and Text

from Part III - The Give of Medium

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2020

Garrett Stewart
Affiliation:
University of Iowa
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Summary

Rounding out the previous chapter’s treatment of Victorian narrative with the early modernist prose of Henry James, analysis returns to the ontology of language in Agamben, leading on to a more philologically oriented history of prose – pivoted on the Enlightenment rise of the “plain style” – in research by John Guillory. Such is a mode of discourse whose potential stranglehold on future developments in literary writing is contrasted with a recovered premium on the densities of rhythm and sonority. Literary examples extend from Whitman’s insurgent lexical poetics, through D. H. Lawrence’s grammatically impacted style, to the stripped-down phrasal ironies of Kazuo Ishiguro – before returning to Friedrich Kittler on the ideologies of speech as medium in the post-Enlightenment century. Discussion closes with an adapted Heideggerian model for the present-at-handness of language itself in medial disclosure – rather than just in scriptive use.

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Chapter
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Book, Text, Medium
Cross-Sectional Reading for a Digital Age
, pp. 173 - 214
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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