Paralyses

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Paralyses

Literature, Travel, and Ethnography in French Modernity

John Culbert

456 pages

Hardcover

January 2011

978-0-8032-2991-4

$65.00 Add to Cart

About the Book

Modernity has long been equated with motion, travel, and change, from Marx’s critical diagnoses of economic instability to the Futurists’ glorification of speed. Likewise, metaphors of travel serve widely in discussions of empire, cultural contact, translation, and globalization, from Deleuze’s “nomadology” to James Clifford’s “traveling cultures.” John Culbert, in contrast, argues that the key texts of modernity and postmodernity may be approached through figures and narratives of paralysis: motion is no more defining of modern travel than fixations, resistance, and impasse; concepts and figures of travel, he posits, must be rethought in this more static light.
 
Focusing on the French and Francophone context, in which paralyzed travel is a persistent motif, Culbert also offers new insights into French critical theory and its often paradoxical figures of mobility, from Blanchot’s pas au-delà and Barthes’s dérive to Derrida’s aporias and Glissant’s diversions. Here we see that paralysis is not merely the failure of transport but rather the condition in which travel, by coming to a crisis, calls into question both mobility and stasis in the language of desire and the order of knowledge. Paralyses provides a close analysis of the rhetoric of empire and the economy of tourism precisely at their points of breakdown, which in turn enables a deconstruction of master narratives of exploration, conquest, and exoticism. A reassessment of key authors of French modernity—from Nerval and Gautier to Fromentin, Paulhan, Beckett, Leiris, and Boudjedra—Paralyses also constitutes a new theoretical intervention in debates on travel, translation, ethics, and postcoloniality.

Author Bio

John Culbert teaches at Scripps College and has published articles in numerous journals, including October, Postmodern Culture, Qui Parle, and L’Esprit Créateur.

Praise

"Culbert convincingly shows how in their travel accounts, diverse colonial and postcolonial authors such as Eugene Fromentin, Jean Paulhan, Michel Leiris, Roland Barthes, and Rachid Boudjedra are always caught in a double bind of mobility and stasis."—C.B. Kerr, Choice

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments   000

Introduction      000

1. The Muse of Paralysis      000

2. Horizon of Conquest: Eugène Fromentin's Algerian Narratives    000

3. Slow Progress: Jean Paulhan and Madagascar   000

4. Frustration: Michel Leiris 000

5. Atopia: Roland Barthes     000

6. The Wake of Ulysses  000

Notes 000

Bibliography      000

Index 000

Awards

Winner of the Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize for French and Francophone Studies, sponsored by the Modern Languages Association

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