Titre : | The Promise and Premise of Creativity : Why Comparative Literature Matters | Type de document : | texte imprimé | Auteurs : | Eugene Eoyang, Auteur | Editeur : | London : Continuum | Année de publication : | 2012 | Importance : | 208 p. | Format : | 21.6 x 13.8 x 1.8 centimetres (3.43 kg) | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-1-4411-8103-9 | Langues : | Anglais | Mots-clés : | Comparative-Literature-Matters. | Résumé : | The Promise and Premise of Creativity considers literature in the larger context of globalization and "the clash of cultures." Refuting the view that the study of literature is "useless," Eoyang argues that it expands three distinct intellectual skills: creative imagination, vicarious sympathy, and capacious intuition. With the advent of the personal computer and the blurring of cultural and economic boundaries, it is the ability to imagine, to intuit, and to invent that will mark the educated student, and allow her to survive the rapid pace of change. As never before, the ability to empathize with other peoples, to understand cultures very different from one's own, is vital to success in a globalized world. In this, the very "uselessness" of literature may inure the mind to think creatively. Engaging with both the theory and practice of literature, its past and its potential future, Eoyang claims that our sense of the world at large, of the salient similarities and differences between cultures, would be critically diminished without comparative literature.
| Note de contenu : | Table of Contents:
Foreword Preliminaries 1. Why Study Literature? 2. What's the Story-The Relevance of Literature to Life 3. The Uses of the Useless: Comparative Literature and the Multinational Corporation Approaches 4. Macintosh Apples and Mandarin Oranges: Comparing East and West. 5. Cuentos Chinos ("Chinese Tales"): The Exotic Imaginary 6. Francophone Cathay: Gallicizing China 7. The Persistence of Cathay: China in World Literature8. The Emergence of the Southern Hemisphere in Literature: Neglected Domains 9. Cross-Cultural Perspectives on the Modern and the Postmodern: Ethnocentricities 10. Cultural Logics: Contradiction vs. Maodun 11. Dialectical Maodun in the Works of Octavio Paz: The Mestizo Mind 12. Meaningful and Meaningless Comparison: The Heuristic and the Invidious Prospects 13. The Globalization of Knowledge: Comparative Literature as Interdisciplinary and Multilingual Discourse 14. The Glocalization of Knowledge: The Ends of the World or the Edge of Heaven 15. The Undisciplined Discipline: Comparative Literature and Creative Wandering 16. Synergies and Synaesthesia: An Intraworldly Comparative Literature Bibliography Index. |
The Promise and Premise of Creativity : Why Comparative Literature Matters [texte imprimé] / Eugene Eoyang, Auteur . - London : Continuum, 2012 . - 208 p. ; 21.6 x 13.8 x 1.8 centimetres (3.43 kg). ISBN : 978-1-4411-8103-9 Langues : Anglais Mots-clés : | Comparative-Literature-Matters. | Résumé : | The Promise and Premise of Creativity considers literature in the larger context of globalization and "the clash of cultures." Refuting the view that the study of literature is "useless," Eoyang argues that it expands three distinct intellectual skills: creative imagination, vicarious sympathy, and capacious intuition. With the advent of the personal computer and the blurring of cultural and economic boundaries, it is the ability to imagine, to intuit, and to invent that will mark the educated student, and allow her to survive the rapid pace of change. As never before, the ability to empathize with other peoples, to understand cultures very different from one's own, is vital to success in a globalized world. In this, the very "uselessness" of literature may inure the mind to think creatively. Engaging with both the theory and practice of literature, its past and its potential future, Eoyang claims that our sense of the world at large, of the salient similarities and differences between cultures, would be critically diminished without comparative literature.
| Note de contenu : | Table of Contents:
Foreword Preliminaries 1. Why Study Literature? 2. What's the Story-The Relevance of Literature to Life 3. The Uses of the Useless: Comparative Literature and the Multinational Corporation Approaches 4. Macintosh Apples and Mandarin Oranges: Comparing East and West. 5. Cuentos Chinos ("Chinese Tales"): The Exotic Imaginary 6. Francophone Cathay: Gallicizing China 7. The Persistence of Cathay: China in World Literature8. The Emergence of the Southern Hemisphere in Literature: Neglected Domains 9. Cross-Cultural Perspectives on the Modern and the Postmodern: Ethnocentricities 10. Cultural Logics: Contradiction vs. Maodun 11. Dialectical Maodun in the Works of Octavio Paz: The Mestizo Mind 12. Meaningful and Meaningless Comparison: The Heuristic and the Invidious Prospects 13. The Globalization of Knowledge: Comparative Literature as Interdisciplinary and Multilingual Discourse 14. The Glocalization of Knowledge: The Ends of the World or the Edge of Heaven 15. The Undisciplined Discipline: Comparative Literature and Creative Wandering 16. Synergies and Synaesthesia: An Intraworldly Comparative Literature Bibliography Index. |
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