The Politics of Security and the Art of Judgment in the Writings of Herman Melville and Janet Frame
This dissertation pairs a nineteenth-century American writer, Herman Melville, and a twentieth-century New Zealand writer, Janet Frame, to consider points of overlap between two novelists who were unusually sensitive to the problem of political thinking and decision in situations of state emergency....
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ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-318412013-04-19T19:56:57ZThe Politics of Security and the Art of Judgment in the Writings of Herman Melville and Janet FrameLoosemore, PhilipAmerican literatureNew Zealand literatureHerman Melville (1819-1891)Janet Frame (1924-2004)American politicssovereigntysecurity05910356This dissertation pairs a nineteenth-century American writer, Herman Melville, and a twentieth-century New Zealand writer, Janet Frame, to consider points of overlap between two novelists who were unusually sensitive to the problem of political thinking and decision in situations of state emergency. Consisting of three chapters on Melville’s later maritime fiction (Moby-Dick, Benito Cereno, and Billy Budd, Sailor) and two interleaving chapters on Frame’s late autobiographical and fictional writings (An Angel at My Table and The Carpathians), the dissertation explores how, in the work of these writers, figural work builds around interlinked questions of emergency and judgment. Both writers are interested in situations of peril when the fragility of bodily life is exposed and when the coherence of given political orders is tested. Both probe the response of the human legislative urge and the limits of the power of judgment in the time of crisis and exception, producing narratives of the tense moment of executive decision. Their literary forms heighten awareness of the mechanisms, frameworks, and effects of different modes of judgment--whether cognitive, moral, legal, aesthetic, or political--under emergency conditions. Out of this engagement with the nexus of judgment and security, both writers ask what might happen if we were to abide with precariousness and insecurity rather than default to the often destructive praxis of security. Melville and Frame also push the capacities of language and form in their attempt to represent the possibility of modes of judgment adequate to such political renewal. In their rhetoric and formal structures--including their experimental “disfiguration” of narrative lines--and in their creation of intricate, reflexive literary voices, these writers imagine what it would mean to come up against the limit of, and even to overturn, accepted categories of knowledge and thought, of calculation and judgment.Downes, Paul2011-112012-01-10T19:16:34ZNO_RESTRICTION2012-01-10T19:16:34Z2012-01-10Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/31841en_ca |
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American literature New Zealand literature Herman Melville (1819-1891) Janet Frame (1924-2004) American politics sovereignty security 0591 0356 |
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American literature New Zealand literature Herman Melville (1819-1891) Janet Frame (1924-2004) American politics sovereignty security 0591 0356 Loosemore, Philip The Politics of Security and the Art of Judgment in the Writings of Herman Melville and Janet Frame |
description |
This dissertation pairs a nineteenth-century American writer, Herman Melville, and a twentieth-century New Zealand writer, Janet Frame, to consider points of overlap between two novelists who were unusually sensitive to the problem of political thinking and decision in situations of state emergency. Consisting of three chapters on Melville’s later maritime fiction (Moby-Dick, Benito Cereno, and Billy Budd, Sailor) and two interleaving chapters on Frame’s late autobiographical and fictional writings (An Angel at My Table and The Carpathians), the dissertation explores how, in the work of these writers, figural work builds around interlinked questions of emergency and judgment. Both writers are interested in situations of peril when the fragility of bodily life is exposed and when the coherence of given political orders is tested. Both probe the response of the human legislative urge and the limits of the power of judgment in the time of crisis and exception, producing narratives of the tense moment of executive decision. Their literary forms heighten awareness of the mechanisms, frameworks, and effects of different modes of judgment--whether cognitive, moral, legal, aesthetic, or political--under emergency conditions. Out of this engagement with the nexus of judgment and security, both writers ask what might happen if we were to abide with precariousness and insecurity rather than default to the often destructive praxis of security. Melville and Frame also push the capacities of language and form in their attempt to represent the possibility of modes of judgment adequate to such political renewal. In their rhetoric and formal structures--including their experimental “disfiguration” of narrative lines--and in their creation of intricate, reflexive literary voices, these writers imagine what it would mean to come up against the limit of, and even to overturn, accepted categories of knowledge and thought, of calculation and judgment. |
author2 |
Downes, Paul |
author_facet |
Downes, Paul Loosemore, Philip |
author |
Loosemore, Philip |
author_sort |
Loosemore, Philip |
title |
The Politics of Security and the Art of Judgment in the Writings of Herman Melville and Janet Frame |
title_short |
The Politics of Security and the Art of Judgment in the Writings of Herman Melville and Janet Frame |
title_full |
The Politics of Security and the Art of Judgment in the Writings of Herman Melville and Janet Frame |
title_fullStr |
The Politics of Security and the Art of Judgment in the Writings of Herman Melville and Janet Frame |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Politics of Security and the Art of Judgment in the Writings of Herman Melville and Janet Frame |
title_sort |
politics of security and the art of judgment in the writings of herman melville and janet frame |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1807/31841 |
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