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Guilty Aesthetic Pleasures

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In the wake of radical social movements in the 1960s and 1970s, literary studies’ embrace of politics entailed a widespread rejection of aesthetic considerations. For scholars invested in literature’s role in supporting or challenging dominant ideologies, appreciating literature’s formal beauty seemed frivolous and irresponsible, even complicit with the iniquities of the social order. This suspicion of aesthetics became the default posture within literary scholarship, a means of establishing the rigor of one’s thought and the purity of one’s political commitments. Yet as Timothy Aubry explains, aesthetic pleasure never fully disappeared from the academy. It simply went underground.

From New Criticism to the digital humanities, Aubry recasts aesthetics as the complicated, morally ambiguous, embattled yet resilient protagonist in late twentieth-century and early twenty-first–century literary studies. He argues that academic critics never stopped asserting preferences for certain texts, rhetorical strategies, or intellectual responses. Rather than serving as the enemy of formalism and aesthetics, political criticism enabled scholars to promote heightened experiences of perceptual acuity and complexity while adjudicating which formal strategies are best designed to bolster these experiences. Political criticism, in other words, did not eradicate but served covertly to nurture reading practices aimed at achieving aesthetic satisfaction.

Guilty Aesthetic Pleasures shows that literary studies’ break with midcentury formalism was not as clean as it once appeared. Today, when so many scholars are advocating renewed attention to textual surfaces and aesthetic experiences, Aubry’s work illuminates the surprisingly vast common ground between the formalists and the schools of criticism that succeeded them.

Author: Aubry Timothy
Publisher: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 286
ISBN: 9780674986466
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2018

Introduction

1. The Intellectual Critics and the Pleasures of Complexity

2. Appetite for Deconstruction

3. New Historicism and the Aesthetics of the Archive

4. Lolita and the Stakes of Form

5. Why Is Beloved So Universally Beloved?

Conclusion: Reading the Surface in the Distance

Notes

Works Cited

Acknowledgments

Index

Timothy Aubry is Associate Professor of English at Baruch College, City University of New York.

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