Jacques Rancière has continually unsettled political discourse, particularly through his questioning of aesthetic "distributions of the sensible," which configure the limits of what can be seen and said. Widely recognized as a seminal work in Rancière's corpus, the translation of which is long overdue, Mute Speech is an intellectual tour de force proposing a new framework for thinking about the history of art and literature. Rancière argues that our current notion of "literature" is a relatively recent creation, having first appeared in the wake of the French Revolution and with the rise of Romanticism. In its rejection of the system of representational hierarchies that had constituted belles-letters, "literature" is founded upon a radical equivalence in which all things are possible expressions of the life of a people. With an analysis reaching back to Plato, Aristotle, the German Romantics, Vico, and Cervantes and concluding with brilliant readings of Flaubert, Mallarmé, and Proust, Rancière demonstrates the uncontrollable democratic impulse lying at the heart of literature's still-vital capacity for reinvention.
- Contents
- Introduction: Through the Looking Glass
- Introduction: From One Literature to An Other
- PART 1: From Restricted to General Poetics
- Chapter 1: From Representation to Expression
- Chapter 2: From the Book of Stone to the Book of Life
- Chapter 3: The Book of Life and the Expression of Society
- PART 2: From Generalized to the Mute Letter
- Chapter 4: From the Poetry of the Future to the Poetry of the Past
- Chapter 5: The Book in Pieces
- Chapter 6: The Fable of the Letter
- Chapter 7: Writing at War
- PART 3: The Contradictions of the Work of Literature
- Chapter 8: The Book in Style
- Chapter 9: The Writing of the Idea
- Chapter 10: Artifice, Madness, the Work
- Conclusion: A Skeptical Art
- Notes