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Comforting Myths: Concerning the Political in Art

Contributor(s): Alameddine, Rabih (Author)

ISBN: 9780813952512

Publisher: University of Virginia Press

Hardcover
$19.95
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Pub Date: October 22, 2024

Dewey: 809.3

LCCN: 2024016350

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Price on Product

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.55" H x 7.56" L x 4.88" W ( 0.50 lbs) 96 pages

Series: Kapnick Foundation Distinguished Writer-In-Residence Lectures

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: "In this collection of brief essays (the first originally a lecture), Rabih Alameddine questions the premise of dividing politics and art into an either/or proposition. He points to the underlying political nature of most works of literature and reveals how a political dimension enlarges a work of art rather than making it less beautiful or reducing it to a polemic. And he ponders what makes art political to begin with: how essential is the artist's conscious political intent, and what does the reader or viewer contribute to the work's political capacity or significance? In exploring these questions, Alameddine engages intensely with his role as an immigrant and a gay author writing inside a globally dominant culture, and invokes the work of numerous writers, from Tayeb Salih and Aleksandar Hemon to Teju Cole and Salman Rushdie, who also struggle to be heard as something more than an "other.""--

Review Quotes: A provocative treatise by one of our most important literary writers on the role of politics in literature. Like all of his work, it is both wise and funny.--Amy Tan, author of The Joy Luck Club

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