Extravagant

Regular price €29.99
A01=Robert Baker
apocalyptic negativity
Author_Robert Baker
Bataille
Category=DSC
Category=QDH
constructivism
creative negativity
decentering
Derrida
Dickinson
dispersing
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_non-fiction
erring
expressivism
instrumental reason
Kant
Kierkegaard
Lyotard
Mallarmé
modern period
Nietzsche
philosophy
poetry
religionists without religion
religious discourse
Rimbaud
romantic period
sublime
undoing
visionary quest
wandering
Wordsworth

Product details

  • ISBN 9780268021825
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 05 May 2005
  • Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In The Extravagant Robert Baker explores the interplay between poetry and philosophy in the modern period, engaging a broad range of writers: Kant, Wordsworth, and Lyotard in a chapter on the sublime; Rimbaud, Nietzsche, and Bataille in a chapter on visionary quest; and Kierkegaard, Dickinson, Mallarmé, and Derrida in a chapter on apocalyptic negativity. His guiding concern is to illuminate adventures of “extravagant” or “wandering” language that, from the romantic period on, both poets and philosophers have undertaken in opposition to the dominant social and discursive frames of a pervasively instrumentalized world.

The larger interpretative narrative shaping the book is that a dialectic of instrumental reason and creative negativity has been at work throughout modern culture. Baker argues that adventures of exploratory wandering emerge in the romantic period as displaced articulations of older religious discourses. Given the dominant trends of the modern world, however, these adventures repeatedly lead to severe collisions and crises, in response to which they are later revised or further displaced. Over time, as instrumental structures come to disfigure every realm of modern life, poetries and philosophies at odds with these structures are forced to criticize and surpass earlier voices in their traditions that seem to have lost a transformative power. Thus, Baker argues, these adventures gradually unfold into various discourses of the negative prominent in contemporary culture: discourses of decentering, dispersing, undoing, and erring. It is this dialectic that Baker traces and interprets in this ambitious study.

Robert Baker is associate professor of English at the University of Montana, Missoula.