Unfinished Enlightenment

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A01=Joanna Stalnaker
Author_Joanna Stalnaker
Category=DSB
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eq_biography-true-stories
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French Enlightenment
interdisciplinary description
natural histories
scientific poetry
urban topographies

Product details

  • ISBN 9780801448645
  • Weight: 907g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 May 2010
  • Publisher: Cornell University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In The Unfinished Enlightenment, Joanna Stalnaker offers a fresh look at the French Enlightenment by focusing on the era's vast, collective attempt to compile an ongoing and provisional description of the world. Through a series of readings of natural histories, encyclopedias, scientific poetry, and urban topographies, the book uncovers the deep epistemological and literary tensions that made description a central preoccupation for authors such as Buffon, Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, Diderot, Delille, and Mercier.

Stalnaker argues that Enlightenment description was the site of competing truth claims that would eventually resolve themselves in the modern polarity between literature and science. By the mid-nineteenth century, the now habitual association between description and the novel was already firmly anchored in French culture, but just a century earlier, in the diverse network of articles on description in Diderot and d'Alembert's Encyclopédie and in the works derived from it, there was not a single mention of the novel. Instead, we find articles on description in natural history, geometry, belles-lettres, and poetry. Stalnaker builds on the premise that the tendency to view description as the inevitable (and subservient) partner of narration—rather than as a universal tool for making sense of knowledge in all fields—has obscured the central place of description in Enlightenment discourse. As a result, we have neglected some of the most original and experimental works of the eighteenth century.

Joanna Stalnaker is Assistant Professor in the Department of French and Romance Philology at Columbia University.

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