Estrangement Revisited
Part I
An issue of: Poetics Today
Special Issue Editors: Meir Sternberg, Svetlana Boym
Literature and Literary Studies > Literary Criticism, Literature and Literary Studies > Literary Theory, European Studies > Eastern Europe and Russia
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Table Of Contents
Back to TopEstrangement Revisited (I)
1. Acknowledgments–The Editors
2. Poetics and Politics of Estrangement: Victor Shklovsky and Hannah Arendt–Svetlana Boym, Harvard
3. Minding the Gap: Toward a Historical Poetics of Estrangement–Michael Holquist and Ilya Kliger, Yale
4. Shklovsky’s ostranenie, Bakhtin’s vnenakhodimost’ (How Distance Serves an
Aesthetics of Arousal Differently from an Aesthetics Based on Pain)–Caryl Emerson, Princeton
5. The Politics of Estrangement: The Case of the Early Shklovsky–Galin Tihanov, Lancaster
6. Why the First-Wave Russian Literary Diaspora Embraced Shklovskian Estrangement–Greta N. Slobin, Wesleyan
7. Dostoevsky’s Estrangement–Nancy Ruttenburg, NYU
8. Notes on Contributors
Estrangement Revisited (II)
9. Acknowledgments–The Editors
10. Distortion and Theatricality: Estrangement in Diderot and Shklovsky–Tatiana Smoliarova, Columbia
11. The Politics of Estrangement: Tracking Shklovsky’s Device through Literary and Policing Practices–Cristina Vatulescu, Harvard
12. My Leader, Myself ? Pictorial Estrangement and Aesopian Language in the Late Work of Kazimir Malevich–Anna Wexler Katsnelson, Harvard
13. Lyn Hejinian and Russian Estrangement–Jacob Edmond, Otago
14. Telling in Time (III): Chronology, Estrangement, and Stories of Literary History–Meir Sternberg,Tel Aviv
15. Conversation with Viktor Borisovich Shklovsky, January 9, 1981–Marietta Chudakova, Moscow
16. Notes on Contributors