Summary Of Rita Felski's The Limits Of Critique - 1565.
Rita Felski, The Limits of Critique. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2015.
Rita Felski is the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of English and Chair of Comparative Literature at the University of Virginia, and an Associate Editor of New Literary History. She is the author of Beyond Feminist Aesthetics, The Gender of Modernity, Doing Time: Feminist Theory and Postmodern Culture, and Literature After Feminism.She is also editor of Rethinking Tragedy.
Week 10: Critique. Readings: Rita Felski, 'Introduction', in The Limits of Critique (2015, 14 pp.) Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, 'Paranoid Reading and Reparative Reading, or, You're So Paranoid, You Probably Think This Essay is about You', in Touching Feeling: Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity (2002, 29pp.) Suggested further readings.
Displaying little patience for this postcritical turn, conference participants were in near unanimous agreement that the notion of critique one finds in Rita Felski’s The Limits of Critique, or in Stephen Best and Sharon Marcus’s “Surface Reading” essay, is a reductive caricature. What scholar today actually “ruminates on a text’s hidden meaning or representational failures”? And.
Rita Felski is William R. 2008). Her most recent book, The Limits of Critique (Chicago UP, 2015), is on the hermeneutics of suspicion as mood and method. Felski is the editor of Rethinking Tragedy (Johns Hopkins, 2008) and co-editor of Comparison: Theories, Approaches, Uses (Johns Hopkins, 2013). She has also published articles in numerous essay collections and in such scholarly journals as.
Rita Felski is an academic and critic, who holds the William R. Kenan Jr. Professorship of English at the University of Virginia and is a former editor of New Literary History. She is also Niels Bohr Professor at the University of Southern Denmark (2016-2021).
This forum offers a discussion of The Limits of Critique, a work of literary theory by Rita Felski, the William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor of English at the University of Virginia and editor of New.