For a half century, the American intellectual Fredric Jameson has been a driving force in literary and cultural theory. In Periodizing Jameson, Phillip E. Wegner builds upon Jameson’s unique dialectical method to demonstrate the value of Jameson’s tools—periodization, the fourfold hermeneutic, and the Greimasian semiotic square, among others—and to develop virtuoso readings of Jameson’s own work and the history of the contemporary American university in which it unfolds.
Wegner shows how Jameson’s work intervenes in particular social, cultural, and political situations, using his scholarship both to develop original explorations of nineteenth-century fiction, popular films, and other promiment theorists, and to examine the changing fortunes of theory itself. In this way, Periodizing Jameson casts new light on the potential of and challenges to humanist intellectual work in the present.
PHILLIP E. WEGNER is Marston-Milbauer Eminent Scholar at the University of Florida. His previous books include Imaginary Communities: Utopia, the Nation, and the Spatial Histories of Modernity (2002) and Life Between Two Deaths: U.S. Culture, 1989–2001 (2009).
“We’ve been waiting for a book this sharp, smart, clear, and adventurous on the work of one of the preeminent literary and cultural critics of the past half-century: Fredric Jameson. Wegner’s Periodizing Jameson is a thrilling read from start to finish: it left my head buzzing with ideas.”—Imre Szeman
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