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VOLUME TITLE:
The Invention of Politics in European Modernism

VOLUME OUTLINE:
The ties between European modernist literature and <political
modernity> have been the focal point of numerous studies in recent
decades. Studies of how modernism represents the political, the self,
<community> and power, often refer to Claude Lefort's thesis that
modern democracy is substantially "empty" or "devoid of any
markers of
certainty". This leaves the question in what ways modernist literature
(might have) played a role in shaping inter-war democracy. Today,
however, analyses focussing on the actual interaction between modernism
and the state of political affairs in various local and national
European contexts are rather scarce. Studies most often are restricted
to "rapports de faits" of extreme cases. The present volume sets out
to
map the array of imagined (and experienced) communities present in
modernist literature. It also calls for a thorough historicization of
the links between modernism and the concrete shape of <political
modernisation or democratisation> in European regions and states
between 1909 and 1940. To do so, the volume will be divided into three
sections. The first section will chart a number of ways in which
modernist authorial personae create selves, communities and authority
or power. Papers are welcomed on major modernist and historical avant-
garde writers or texts. In the second section, attention will be given
to modernist <writing practices> performing the role of rituals or
language games within small-scale literary communities (from the
solitary Valéryan writing practice to the collaborative écriture
automatique.) The third and final section of the volume will
investigate the incorporation of aspects of modernism into political
discourses present in inter-war democratic constellations, both
formally (rhetorical or textual) as well as substantially or
thematically. Rather than departing from pre-given political ideologies
a "bottom to top" approach is invited.

CALL FOR PAPERS:
One-page abstracts for 5000-word papers are invited for one of the
sections in the volume.

DEADLINE:
September 15, 2003

CONTACT:
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University of Ghent
Comparative Literature and Literary Theory
Rozier 44 -- B-9000 Ghent
tel: + 32 (0) 9 264 40 69