MONASH UNIVERSITY FACULTY HANDBOOKS

Arts Graduate Handbook 1996

Published by Monash University
Clayton, Victoria 3168, Australia

Authorised by Academic Registrar, April 1996


ENM4920/5920

Literature and negativity

Kevin Hart

8 or 12 points + 2 hours per week + First semester + Clayton

Synopsis Negativity has been a durable theme of modern thought and writing, and in recent years it has become of considerable structural interest. The notion is variously defined, usually with reference to one or more of philosophy, psychoanalysis and theology. When brought into literary studies it assumes a wide range of guises: difference, interpretation, nothingness, reading, repression, the unsayable, and writing. This subject seeks to analyse `negativity' in the work of two modern writers, Franz Kafka and Maurice Blanchot, and it will do so with the help of a range of critical theorists, including Theodor Adorno, Walter Benjamin, Harold Bloom, Gilles Deleuze, Jacques Derrida, and Julia Kristeva.

Assessment (8 points) Assignment/s (2500 words): 40% + Essay (3500 words): 60%

Assessment (12 points) Two essays (3000 words each): 50% each

Prescribed texts


| Subjects Part 2 | Arts Graduate Handbook | Monash handbooks | Monash University