Adding product to your cart
| Author/Contributor(s): |
Sartre, Jean-Paul ; Ungar, Steven
|
| Publisher: |
Harvard University Press
|
| Date: |
10/15/1988
|
| Binding: |
Paperback
|
| Condition: |
NEW
|
What is Literature? remains the most significant critical landmark of French literature since World War II. Neither abstract nor abstruse, it is a brilliant, provocative performance by a writer more inspired than cautious.
What is Literature? challenges anyone who writes as if literature could be extricated from history or society. But Sartre does more than indict. He offers a definitive statement about the phenomenology of reading, and he goes on to provide a dashing example of how to write a history of literature that takes ideology and institutions into account. This new edition of
What is Literature? also collects three other crucial essays of Sartre's for the first time in a volume of his. The essays presenting Sartre's monthly,
Les Temps modernes, and on the peculiarly French manner of nationalizing literature do much to create a context for Sartre's treatise. Black Orpheus has been for many years a key text for the study of black and third-world literatures.
Use left/right arrows to navigate the slideshow or swipe left/right if using a mobile device