A Companion to Comparative Literature presents a collection
of more than thirty original essays from established and emerging
scholars, which explore the history, current state, and future of
comparative literature.
* Features over thirty original essays from leading international
contributors
* Provides a critical assessment of the status of literary and
cross-cultural inquiry
* Addresses the history, current state, and future of comparative
literature
* Chapters address such topics as the relationship between
translation and transnationalism, literary theory and emerging
media, the future of national literatures in an era of
globalization, gender and cultural formation across time, East-West
cultural encounters, postcolonial and diaspora studies, and other
experimental approaches to literature and culture
Table of Content
List of Contributors viii
Introduction 1
Ali Behdad and Dominic Thomas
Part I Roadmaps 13
1 A Discipline of Tolerance 15
Rey Chow
2 Why Compare? 28
David Ferris
3 Method and Congruity: The Odious Business of Comparative Literature 46
David Palumbo-Liu
4 Comparisons, World Literature, and the Common Denominator 60
Haun Saussy
5 Comparative Literature in America: Attempt at a Genealogy 65
Kenneth Surin
Part II Theoretical Directions 73
6 The Poieinof Secular Criticism 75
Stathis Gourgouris
7 Vanishing Horizons: Problems in the Comparison of China and the West 88
Eric Hayot
8 Art and Literature in the Liquid Modern Age: On Richard Wollheim, Zygmunt Bauman and Yves Michaud 108
Efraín Kristal
9 A Literary Object’s Contextual Life 120
Michael Lucey
10 The Theater of Comparative Literature 136
Sharon Marcus
Part III Disciplinary Intersections 155
11 What Pictures Tell Us about the Letter: Visual and Literary Practices in Latin America 157
Jorge Coronado
12 If There’s a Text in this Class, Where Did it Come From? Or, What Does Marilyn Monroe Have to do With The Sorrows of Young Man Werther? 176
Richard Maxwell and Toby Miller
13 Comparative Literature in the Age of Digital Humanities: On Possible Futures for a Discipline 193
Todd Presner
14 Comparing Pain: Theoretical Explorations of Suffering and Working Towards the Particular 208
Zoë Norridge
15 Comparativism, Transfers, Entangled History: Sociological Perspectives on Literature 225
Gisèle Sapiro
Part IV Linguistic Trajectories 237
16 Orphaned Language: Traumatic Crossings in Literature and History 239
Cathy Caruth
17 Contested Grammars: Comparative Literature, Translation, and the Challenge of Locality 254
Simon Gikandi
18 Comparative Literature and the Global Languagescape 273
Mary Louise Pratt
19 Persian Incursions: The Transnational Dynamics of Persian Literature 296
Nasrin Rahimieh
20 Rudimentariness as Home 312
Mireille Rosello
Part V Postcolonial Mobilities 333
21 Afro-European Studies: Emerging Fields and New Directions 335
Allison Van Deventer and Dominic Thomas
22 The Comparative and the Relational: Meditations on Racial Method 357
David Theo Goldberg
23 Kidnapped Narratives: Mobility without Autonomy and the Nation/Novel Analogy 369
Deborah Jenson
24 Counterpoint and Double Critique in Edward Said and Abdelkebir Khatibi: A Transcolonial Comparison 387
Françoise Lionnet
25 How French Studies Became Transnational; Or Postcolonialism as Comparatism 408
David Murphy
26 Towards a Planetary Reading of Postcolonial and American Imaginative Eco-Graphies 421
Sangeeta Ray
Part VI Global Connections 437
27 Terrestrial Humanism: Edward W. Said and the Politics of World Literature 439
Emily Apter
28 Logics and Contexts of Circulation 454
Brian T. Edwards
29 ‘Worlds in Collision:’ The Languages and Locations of World Literature 473
Charles Forsdick
30 The Trouble with World Literature 490
Graham Huggan
Index 507
About the author
Ali Behdad is John Charles Hillis Professor of
Comparative Literature and Chair of English Department at
UCLA. He is the author of Belated Travelers: Orientalism in the
Age of Colonial Dissolution (1995) and A Forgetful Nation:
On Immigration and Cultural Identity in the United States
(2005).
Dominic Thomas is Madeleine L. Letessier Professor
of French and Francophone Studies and Professor of Comparative
Literature at the University of California, Los Angeles. He has
edited several volumes on cultural and political topics and is the
author of Black France: Colonialism, Immigration and
Transnationalism (2007) and Africa and France:
Postcolonial Cultures, Migration and Racism (2013).