Reviews:
“This is a book that
banishes intellectual lethargy forever, so dazzling are the close readings that
flesh out its world-scale philosophy and so forceful is its polemic—a polemic
on behalf of knowledge itself as much as theory, commitment, and a responsibly
grounded, even necessary, account of hope.”
— Bruce Robbins,
author of The Beneficiary
“With originality and
humor, Phillip E. Wegner extends Fredric Jameson’s tradition of dialectically
reappropriating formalisms, showing how even the most seemingly static
structures can be deployed to think diachronically and reinvigorate our
abilities to historicize. This fearless book is exactly what we need now.”
— Sianne Ngai,
University of Chicago
“Invoking Hope
is a major intervention by our leading theorist of utopia—a manifesto for the
crisis of the present and the possibility of a better future. Drawing on a mix
of Western Marxism and Badiou,
Phillip E. Wegner argues for the necessity of a positive hermeneutics and the
imagination of possible futures. In the Pandora’s box of the present, Wegner
finds the hope that emerges last but promises everything.”
— Christopher Breu,
Illinois State University
Description:
What
does any particular theory allow us to do? What is the value of doing so? And
who benefits? In Invoking Hope, Phillip E. Wegner argues for the
undiminished importance of the practices of theory, utopia, and a deep and
critical reading of our current situation of what Bertolt Brecht refers to as
finsteren Zeiten, or dark times.
Invoking Hope was written in response to
three events that occurred in 2016: the five hundredth anniversary of the
publication of Thomas More’s Utopia; the one hundredth anniversary of
the founding text in theory, Ferdinand de Saussure’s Course in General
Linguistics; and the rise of the right-wing populism that culminated in the
election of Donald Trump. Wegner offers original readings of major
interventions in theory alongside dazzling utopian imaginaries developed from
classical Greece to our global present—from Theodor Adorno, Ernst Bloch, Alain
Badiou, Jacques Derrida, Fredric Jameson, Sarah Ahmed,
Susan Buck-Morss, and Jacques Lacan to such works as Plato’s Republic, W. E. B.
Du Bois’s John Brown,
Isak Dinesen’s “Babette’s Feast,” Kim Stanley Robinson’s 2312, and more. Wegner
comments on an expansive array of modernist and contemporary literature, film,
theory, and popular culture.
With
Invoking Hope, Wegner provides an innovative lens for considering the
rise of right-wing populism and the current crisis in democracy. He discusses
challenges in the humanities and higher education and develops strategies of
creative critical reading and hope against the grain of current trends in
scholarship.
Contents:
Introduction:
Reading in Dark Times
Part I. Reading Theory
Chapter 1. Reading the Event of the New
Criticism and the Fate of the Republic
Chapter 2. Toward Nonreading Utopia
Chapter 3. Beyond Ethical Reading; or,
Reading Again the James-Wells Debate
Part II. Reading Utopia
Chapter 4. John Brown, W. E. B. Du
Bois, and Universal History
Chapter 5. Politics, Art, and Utopia in
“Babette’s Feast”
Chapter 6. Repetition, Love, and
Concrete Utopia in 50 First Dates
Chapter 7. Conditions of Utopia in 2312
and The Best of All Possible Worlds
Conclusion:
Optimism and Pessimism in Cloud Atlas
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
About the Author:
Phillip E. Wegner is Marston–Milbauer Eminent
Scholar in English at the University of Florida. He is author of Life
between Two Deaths, 1989–2001: U.S. Culture in the Long Nineties; Periodizing
Jameson: Dialectics, the University, and the Desire for Narrative; and
Shockwaves of Possibility: Essays on Science Fiction, Globalization, and
Utopia.
Target Audience:
Students
and academicians of philosophy.