Frontmatter -- Contents -- Foreword -- Introducing Historical Poetics -- Chapter 1. From the Introduction to Historical Poetics -- Chapter 2. Alexander Veselovsky’s Historical Poetics vs. Cultural Poetics -- Chapter 4. Metapragmatics, Toposforschung, Marxist Stylistics -- Chapter 5. The Oresteia in the Odyssey (1946) -- Chapter 6. Innovation Disguised as Tradition -- Chapter 7. A Remnant Poetics -- Chapter 8. On “Genre Memory” in Bakhtin -- Chapter 9. The Age of Sensibility (1904) -- Chapter 10. Against Ornament -- Chapter 11. Breakfast at Dawn -- Chapter 12. From the Prehistory of Rus sian Novel Theory -- Chapter 13. Satire (1940), for the Literary Encyclopedia -- Chapter 14. Columbus’s Egg, or the Structure of the Novella (1973) -- Chapter 15. On the Eve of Epic -- Chapter 16. Schematics and Models of Genre -- Further Readings in Historical Poetics -- Contributors -- Index Since the mid-1980s, attempts to think history and literature together have produced much exciting work in the humanities. Indeed, some form of historicism can be said to inform most of the current scholarship in literary studies, including work in poetics, yet much of this scholarship remains undertheorized.Envisioning a revitalized and more expansive historicism, this volume builds on the tradition of Historical Poetics, pioneered by Alexander Veselovsky (1838–1906) and developed in various fruitful directions by the Russian Formalists, Mikhail Bakhtin, and Olga Freidenberg. The volume includes previously untranslated texts of some of the major scholars in this critical tradition, as well as original contributions which place that tradition in dialogue with other thinkers who have approached literature in a globally comparatist and evolutionary-historical spirit. The contributors seek to challenge and complement a historicism that stresses proximate sociopolitical contexts through an engagement with the longue durée of literary forms and institutions. In particular, Historical Poetics aims to uncover deep-historical stratifications and asynchronicities, in which formal solutions may display elective affinities with other, chronologically distant solutions to analogous social and political problems.By recovering the traditional nexus of philology and history, Persistent Forms seeks to reinvigorate poetics as a theoretical discipline that would respond to such critical and intellectual developments as Marxism, New Historicism, the study of world literature, practices of distant reading, and a renewed attention to ritual, oral poetics, and genre
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