In The Singularity of Literature (2004), Derek Attridge set out the three cornerstones of his literary theory: singularity describes the work of literature’s capacity for endless transformation while retaining its identity as an act-event; inventiveness characterises the work as something absolutely new that has been both made and discovered; otherness is the quality of unpredictability and difference that challenges the expectations and values of the reader. In The Work of Literature, Attridge amplifies, clarifies, and refines these ‘three different aspects of the literariness of the literary work’ (p.57), which are irretrievably interlocked in the experience of the act-event and cannot be elucidated in isolation. A culture is sustained by...
Our affective response to works of literature, Derek Attridge argues in “Once more with feeling: art...
In this essay I offer a framework by which to comprehend what Margaret Cavendish calls 'singularity'...
Literature is a product of the writer’s artistic imagination. The writer accurately observes the hap...
Derek Attridge, The Singularity of Literature. London and New York: Routledge, 2004. 173 pp. (+ xiii...
One of Derek Attridge's principal concerns in J. M. Coetzee and the Ethics of Reading is the relatio...
This review essay outlines Derek Attridge’s argument for a form of critical attention to the literar...
Derek Attridge’s insight that, ‘Coetzee’s works both stage, and are, irruptions of otherness i...
In this thesis, I present a new argument for the autonomy of literature. The conclusion that litera...
The contentious discourse around world literature tends to stress the ‘world’ in the phrase. This vo...
Up to few decades ago, aesthetics and theory were considered two separate disciplines in the realm o...
Reading is a complex process. It mostly aims at getting at the most accurate meaning of a text, but ...
The contemporary debate in the philosophy of literature is strongly shaped by the anticognitivist ch...
The idea of an interview with Peter Lamarque and Derek Attridge on the cognitive value of literary f...
What is the ethical value of autonomous literary fiction? Doesn’t literary autonomy lead inevitably ...
The contemporary debate in the philosophy of literature is strongly shaped by the anti-cognitivist c...
Our affective response to works of literature, Derek Attridge argues in “Once more with feeling: art...
In this essay I offer a framework by which to comprehend what Margaret Cavendish calls 'singularity'...
Literature is a product of the writer’s artistic imagination. The writer accurately observes the hap...
Derek Attridge, The Singularity of Literature. London and New York: Routledge, 2004. 173 pp. (+ xiii...
One of Derek Attridge's principal concerns in J. M. Coetzee and the Ethics of Reading is the relatio...
This review essay outlines Derek Attridge’s argument for a form of critical attention to the literar...
Derek Attridge’s insight that, ‘Coetzee’s works both stage, and are, irruptions of otherness i...
In this thesis, I present a new argument for the autonomy of literature. The conclusion that litera...
The contentious discourse around world literature tends to stress the ‘world’ in the phrase. This vo...
Up to few decades ago, aesthetics and theory were considered two separate disciplines in the realm o...
Reading is a complex process. It mostly aims at getting at the most accurate meaning of a text, but ...
The contemporary debate in the philosophy of literature is strongly shaped by the anticognitivist ch...
The idea of an interview with Peter Lamarque and Derek Attridge on the cognitive value of literary f...
What is the ethical value of autonomous literary fiction? Doesn’t literary autonomy lead inevitably ...
The contemporary debate in the philosophy of literature is strongly shaped by the anti-cognitivist c...
Our affective response to works of literature, Derek Attridge argues in “Once more with feeling: art...
In this essay I offer a framework by which to comprehend what Margaret Cavendish calls 'singularity'...
Literature is a product of the writer’s artistic imagination. The writer accurately observes the hap...