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Undecidability is a fundamental quality of literature and constitutive of what renders some works appealing and engaging across time and in different contexts. This book explores its role, function and effect in late nineteenth- and twentieth- century literature and literary theory.

Produktbeschreibung
Undecidability is a fundamental quality of literature and constitutive of what renders some works appealing and engaging across time and in different contexts. This book explores its role, function and effect in late nineteenth- and twentieth- century literature and literary theory.
Autorenporträt
Mette Leonard Høeg is Carlsberg Foundation Junior Research Fellow at Linacre College and Postdoctoral Fellow at the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics and the Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities at the University of Oxford, UK. Mette holds a PhD in English from King's College London, is a Fulbright alumna, a literary critic and literary editor at the Danish news media Frihedsbrevet. She has published extensively on Modernist and contemporary literature in magazines and newspapers and contributed papers to several peer-reviewed journals. She is the editor of the anthology Literary Theories of Uncertainty (2021).
Rezensionen
Mette Leonard Høeg has done literary theory a great service in this wide-ranging, deeply researched, and highly perceptive study. She has a wonderfully clear-headed grasp of two phenomena - uncertainty and undecidability - that pervaded twentieth-century literature and criticism yet have never been analysed with such precision.

Christopher Norris, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, Cardiff University

Mette Leonard Høeg's lucid study combines two important things: a valuable overview of a set of related concepts - uncertainty, ambiguity, indeterminacy, undecideability etc - showing just how constitutive they are across modern culture; and superb readings of exemplary texts by Musil, Ford, Woolf, Proust and Kafka.

Max Saunders, Interdisciplinary Professor of Modern Literature and Culture, University of Birmingham

In this rich, thoughtful and far-reaching study, Mette Leonard Høeg proposes that uncertainty is never merely a side-effect or peripheral concern of this or that theory of literature. Rather, as she deftly and compellingly demonstrates, there is no literary theory - or literature - without it.

Nicholas Royle, Professor of English, University of Sussex