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  • Judith Butler

    Shoshana Felman

  • "Barbara Johnson was a wonderful writer and an extraordinarily engaging thinker. This collection makes easily available her most important essays, which get at central issues in structuralism, deconstruction, psychoanalysis, gender studies, and cultural studies, among other fields. The Barbara Johnson Reader will become the best way to obtain her crucial work and take its place alongside The Foucault Reader and The Butler Reader on students' shelves."—Jonathan Culler, author of The Literary in Theory

    "Having Barbara Johnson's seminal essays gathered in a single book, where they can play off each other so brilliantly, makes clear her unparalleled mastery of the essay as a critical genre. Brought together at last, they constitute a fully realized oeuvre, a contribution to theory as ambitious and accomplished as any in the last half-century."—Lee Edelman, author of No Future and, with Lauren Berlant, of Sex, or the Unbearable

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  • Description

    This Reader collects in a single volume some of the most influential essays written by Barbara Johnson over the course of her thirty-year career as a pioneering literary theorist and cultural critic. Johnson achieved renown early in her career, both as a brilliant student of the Yale School of literary criticism and as the translator of Jacques Derrida's Dissemination. She went on to lead the way in extending the insights of structuralism and poststructuralism into newly emerging fields now central to literary studies, fields such as gender studies, African American studies, queer theory, and law and literature. Stunning models of critical reading and writing, her essays cultivate rigorous questioning of universalizing assumptions, respect for otherness and difference, and an appreciation of ambiguity.

    Along with the classic essays that established her place in literary scholarship, this Reader makes available a selection of Johnson's later essays, brilliantly lucid and politically trenchant works exploring multilingualism and translation, materiality, ethics, subjectivity, and sexuality. The Barbara Johnson Reader offers a historical guide through the metamorphoses and tumultuous debates that have defined literary study in recent decades, as viewed by one of critical theory's most astute thinkers.
    .

    About The Author(s)

    Barbara Johnson (1947–2009) was Professor Emerita of English and Comparative Literature and Fredric Wertham Professor Emerita of Psychiatry and Law in Society at Harvard University.

    Melissa Feuerstein is a Research Associate at the Davis Center at Harvard University.

    Bill Johnson González is Assistant Professor of English at DePaul University.

    Lili Porten has taught in the writing programs at Harvard, Boston University, and Boston College.

    Keja Valens is Associate Professor of English at Salem State University in Salem, Massachusetts.
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