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Pathologies of Motion : Historical Thinking in Medicine, Aesthetics, and Poetics
Pathologies of Motion : Historical Thinking in Medicine, Aesthetics, and Poetics
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Author(s): Goodman, Kevis
ISBN No.: 9780300243963
Pages: 320
Year: 202301
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 62.50
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"This admirable book has everything one could wish for in a literary-studies monograph: deep thinking about a great subject that matters centrally to a field, original research in various archives, virtuoso skill in criticism and exegesis, and a willingness to advance challenging theoretical propositions on the basis of its arguments."--James Chandler, Critical Inquiry Winner of the 2022 Jean-Pierre Barricelli Prize, sponsored by the International Conference on Romanticism Shortlisted for the Marilyn Gaull Award from The Wordsworth Circle "In tracing how eighteenth-century pathology and aesthetics registered causal forces beyond our immediate ken, Kevis Goodman offers an electrifying account of the way poetics made abstract historical processes visible at a pivotal moment in global modernity."--Lynn Festa, author of Fiction Without Humanity "Goodman provides a new way of thinking about human freedom, the imagination, volition, and mobility. This is a richly erudite and theoretically lucid book that anyone working in this period will want to read and reread."--Alan Bewell, University of Toronto "By bringing together aesthetics and medicine, Goodman offers a new and enthralling description of modernity. Pathologies of Motion also brilliantly vindicates, as it demonstrates, the practice of symptomatic reading."--Deidre Lynch, Harvard University "Goodman's elegant, learned work is the entering wedge in a radical rethinking of Romanticism and its predecessors. It reveals a pathological counter-current in tension with the age's dominant aesthetic quest for harmony.


"--Marjorie Levinson, author of Thinking through Poetry "Goodman rediscovers eighteenth-century pathology as a synoptic discipline projecting the material body and the imagination as mutually involved and evolving agents of human behavior and consciousness. Her book thereby offers exciting new readings of reading itself--of the physiological functions of organized sound--as well as of Schiller and the Scottish doctors, of the newly privileged phenomenon of nostalgia, and of some of the best-known Romantic poems."--David Simpson, author of Engaging Violence "Kevis Goodman's book on nostalgia, the disease lurking at the junction of motion and stasis, fulfills her promise to consider tautology as 'the continuation of homesickness by another means.' Like the flaneur who advances by tarrying, or the beggar who moves forward to a sight of nothing but the same, her victim of motion is stranded in a hopeless obsession that nevertheless supplies poetic language with an immense charge of elliptical energy."--Jonathan Lamb, author of Scurvy.


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