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Weather in Proust

Contributor(s): Goldberg, Jonathan (Editor), Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky (Author), Moon, Michael (Editor)

ISBN: 9780822351580

Publisher: Duke University Press

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Pub Date: December 20, 2011

Dewey: 814.54

LCCN: 2011027555

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.60" H x 9.10" L x 6.00" W ( 1.15 lbs) 240 pages

Series: Series Q

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: At the time of her death in after a long battle with cancer, Eve Sedgwick had been working on a book on affect and Proust, and on the psychoanalyst Melanie Klein. This volume, edited by Jonathan Goldberg, brings together a collection of her last work.

Review Quotes: "For a writer whose prose (and thought) could often be astoundingly dense, circuitous, and lovingly (if sometimes frustratingly) devoted to articulating the farthest reaches of complexity, the overall effect of The Weather in Proust is one of great clarification and distillation. Indeed, for those unfamiliar with Sedgwick's work, I would recommend starting with The Weather in Proust and moving backward from there, as the volume offers an enjoyably compressed, coherent, and retrospective portrait of Sedgwick's principal preoccupations."--Maggie Nelson, Los Angeles Review of Books

"Like all of [Sedgwick's] writing, The Weather in Proust both contributes to theory and challenges what we actually mean when we theorize, or read and write theory. . . . The Weather in Proust ravishes in the flexibility of its theoretical energies, in essays on topics as surfacially different as Proustian weather, the Greek poet C.P. Cavafy, Japanese textile practice, anality, and autism. . . . The delight of discovering Sedgwick's own findings arises in part because the voice in these essays feels so lucidly sincere. Her writing feels true, a word which aptly comes from an Old English word meaning "loyal;" her writing feels loyal, both to itself and its readers."--Michael D. Snediker, Theory & Event

"The Weather in Proust embodies Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's seemingly simple yet revolutionary claim that 'people are different.' It is grounded in her commitment to a critical taxonomy that refuses binarisms, that works in the space between two and infinity, whether it be of sexualities or affects, 'kinds of people, ' or even 'little gods, ' a practice she brilliantly argues that Marcel Proust's writing, even its discussion of the weather, and C. P. Cavafy's invocation of the periperformative, epitomize."--Kathryn R. Kent, GLQ

"This posthumous collection of Sedgwick's essays presents readers with a glittering kaleidoscope of 'capacious concerns.' Sedgwick, a pioneer in queer studies, shines as she contemplates Proust, textile art, and mortality in language that is challenging and exhilarating. . . . Engaging with Sedgwick will fill readers will wonder."--Publishers Weekly

"This selection of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's unpublished papers and talks voers a wide range, from lively fragments of a projected book on Proust, to Cafavy, psychoanalysis, and Buddhism. The illuminate Segwick's attempt to establish an epistemology of the individual subject. . . . Sedgwick's wit is tonic. . . ."--Allen Thiher, TLS

"I was deeply moved by the book. It has much to offer to Proust scholars, scholars of queer studies, scholars (and skeptics) of psychoanalysis, and anyone concerned with how intellectual work might be made meaningfully continuous with the creative, political, and pedagogical practices of everyday life. Upon finishing the volume, I felt grief at the loss of this exceptionally gifted theorist, mixed with gratitude for the stunning body of work that Eve Sedgwick has left us--including The Weather in Proust." --Hannah Freed-Thall, MLN

"If Sedgwick found in emptiness a certain energy, a kind of 'arising, ' then those of us who remain in the empty space she has left behind might be encouraged to take up The Weather in Proust when her absence touches us most acutely, to breathe in its atmosphere and bask in the warm climate of its thought."--Gregory Tomso, American Literature

"It is an adventure and a privilege to read The Weather in Proust, but these readerly experiences are alloyed with a strong sense of sadness that this carefully edited and beautifully produced volume should be posthumous. . . . We might think of these collected pieces as the characteristically vibrant and multifarious ways in which Sedgwick came to the 'realisation' of her mortality."--Adam Watt, Journal of Gender Studies

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