Scare Quotes from Shakespeare : Marx, Keynes, and the Language of Reenchantment

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Scare Quotes from Shakespeare : Marx, Keynes, and the Language of Reenchantment

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 224 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780804736213
  • DDC分類 822.33

基本説明

Arugues that moments of allusion to the supernatural in Shakespeare are occasions where Marx and Keynes register the perseverance of haunting structures in modern culture.

Full Description

This book argues that moments of allusion to the supernatural in Shakespeare are occasions where Karl Marx and John Maynard Keynes register the perseverance of haunted structures in modern culture. This "reenchantment," at the heart of modernity and of literary and political works central to our understanding of modernity, is the focus of this book. The author shows that allusion to supernatural moments in Shakespeare ("scare quotes") allows writers to both acknowledge and distance themselves from the supernatural phenomena that challenge their disenchanted understanding of the social world. He also uses these modern appropriations of Shakespeare as provocations to reread some of his works, notably Hamlet and Macbeth.

Two pairs of linked chapters form the center of the book. One pair joins a reading of Marx, concentrating on The Eighteenth Brumaire, to Hamlet; the other links a reading of Keynes, focusing on The Economic Consequences of the Peace, to Macbeth. The chapters on Marx and Keynes trace some of the strange circuits of supernatural rhetoric in their work, Marx's use of ghosts and Keynes's fascination with witchcraft. The sequence linking Marx to Hamlet, for example, has as its anchor the Frankfurt School's concept of the phantasmagoria, the notion that it is in the most archaic that one encounters the figure of the new. Looking closely at Marx's association of the Ghost in Hamlet with the coming revolution in turn illuminates Hamlet's association of the Ghost with the supernatural beings many believed haunted mines.

An opening chapter discusses Henry Dircks, a nineteenth-century English inventor who developed—and then lost his claim to—a phantasmagoria or machine to project ghosts on stage. Dircks resorted to magical rhetoric in response to his loss, which is emblematic for the book as a whole, charting ways the scare quote can, paradoxically, continue the work of enlightenment.

Contents

Introduction Part I. Phantasmagoria: 1. Henry Dircks, inventor of Pepper's Ghost; 2. Carlyle and the impossibility of reenchantment; 3. Spiritualism and the Dircksian phantasmagoria; 4. Homo Alludens: Marx's eighteenth Brumaire; 5. From magic to Marx; 6. Smells like world spirit: allusion, revision, farce; 7. Ghosts in The German Ideology and the Eighteenth Brumaire; 8. Translations of the Mole; 9. Ghosts and contradiction; 10. The ghost of Hamlet in the mine; 11. Mining terms in Hamlet; 12. Replication; 13. 'Shakespearized', or back to the Brumaire; Part II. Witchcraft and History: 14. John Maynard Keynes and reenchantment; 15. Productivity, productivity, productivity; 16. Quotation and haunted spheres of Influence; 17. Keynes' Macbeth; 18.The fantasy of deferred history; 18. Macbeth, scare quotes and supernatural history; 19. James and the 'horrid space' of witchcraft; 20. Seeds, second nature, camouflage; 21. The last scare quote; 22. Conclusion; 23. Ends of the scare quote; 23. Last words on witchcraft.