The Novel in the Epoch of Social Systems: Or, “Maps of the World in Its Becoming”

These pages pose a general, even rough, question: What is the situation of the artwork, and particularly the novel, in what may be described as the epoch of social systems? I mean to suggest that this question has emerged, if often inexplicitly, on a range of fronts, in recent versions of the so-cal...

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Main Author: Mark Seltzer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2017-12-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12266
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spelling doaj-0c1b271603e24bd1907d5767b1c618f22020-11-24T20:46:37ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362017-12-0112310.4000/ejas.12266The Novel in the Epoch of Social Systems: Or, “Maps of the World in Its Becoming”Mark SeltzerThese pages pose a general, even rough, question: What is the situation of the artwork, and particularly the novel, in what may be described as the epoch of social systems? I mean to suggest that this question has emerged, if often inexplicitly, on a range of fronts, in recent versions of the so-called “method wars” in literary studies, and in the humanities more generally. If we demilitarize this rhetoric, and demobilize the nearly one-word arguments that tend to underwrite it, it may be possible to get at the intricated place of the novel among social systems today. It may be possible too to get at (borrowing Alexander Kluge’s good way of framing such matters) something of the precision of rough ideas. Perhaps no American novelist more incisively stages what this convergence looks like—what this systems-ironic turn in the form of the novel means—than Cormac McCarthy. McCarthy’s fiction serves as the throughput of the analysis of the shape and distinction of the art system among a manifold of comparable, and rival, social systems. It provides a view of the pathos, and enchantments, of networks and systems of systems, across the practices and disciplines, the tableaux and forms, the proliferating self-descriptions and roadmaps of contemporary life.http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12266Systems EpochCyberneticsScientologyAnthropotechnicsCormac McCarthyNiklas Luhmann
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Seltzer
spellingShingle Mark Seltzer
The Novel in the Epoch of Social Systems: Or, “Maps of the World in Its Becoming”
European Journal of American Studies
Systems Epoch
Cybernetics
Scientology
Anthropotechnics
Cormac McCarthy
Niklas Luhmann
author_facet Mark Seltzer
author_sort Mark Seltzer
title The Novel in the Epoch of Social Systems: Or, “Maps of the World in Its Becoming”
title_short The Novel in the Epoch of Social Systems: Or, “Maps of the World in Its Becoming”
title_full The Novel in the Epoch of Social Systems: Or, “Maps of the World in Its Becoming”
title_fullStr The Novel in the Epoch of Social Systems: Or, “Maps of the World in Its Becoming”
title_full_unstemmed The Novel in the Epoch of Social Systems: Or, “Maps of the World in Its Becoming”
title_sort novel in the epoch of social systems: or, “maps of the world in its becoming”
publisher European Association for American Studies
series European Journal of American Studies
issn 1991-9336
publishDate 2017-12-01
description These pages pose a general, even rough, question: What is the situation of the artwork, and particularly the novel, in what may be described as the epoch of social systems? I mean to suggest that this question has emerged, if often inexplicitly, on a range of fronts, in recent versions of the so-called “method wars” in literary studies, and in the humanities more generally. If we demilitarize this rhetoric, and demobilize the nearly one-word arguments that tend to underwrite it, it may be possible to get at the intricated place of the novel among social systems today. It may be possible too to get at (borrowing Alexander Kluge’s good way of framing such matters) something of the precision of rough ideas. Perhaps no American novelist more incisively stages what this convergence looks like—what this systems-ironic turn in the form of the novel means—than Cormac McCarthy. McCarthy’s fiction serves as the throughput of the analysis of the shape and distinction of the art system among a manifold of comparable, and rival, social systems. It provides a view of the pathos, and enchantments, of networks and systems of systems, across the practices and disciplines, the tableaux and forms, the proliferating self-descriptions and roadmaps of contemporary life.
topic Systems Epoch
Cybernetics
Scientology
Anthropotechnics
Cormac McCarthy
Niklas Luhmann
url http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12266
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