Synopses & Reviews
Aesthetics is a field still rooted in an understanding of a unified process where small numbers of people produce, commodify, and consume objects called "art." Disunified Aesthetics deconstructs the literary object by invoking the critic's stance toward the written works with which they engage. Lynette Hunter's performative explorations provide a distinctly different way of understanding contemporary creative processes. Disunified Aesthetics takes up twenty-first-century aesthetics through an investigation of recent Canadian writing. The book is both a series of insights into literature and poetics of the last two decades and a story about moving from a traditional view of the relation between the artist, art, and its reception, to a more radically democratic view of aesthetics and ethics. Hunter addresses a range of Canadian women's writing, as well as close studies of the work of Robert Kroetsch, Lee Maracle, Nicole Brossard, Frank Davey, Alice Munro, Daphne Marlatt, and bpNichol. Disunified Aesthetics is a creative, challenging, and original investigation of textuality, performance, and aesthetics by a leading and innovative scholar.
Review
Lynette Hunters work is a superb example of the advantage of crossing disciplinary lines and combining creativity with critical discourse. Extremely valuable for scholars of Canadian literature, theatre and performance, critical theory (in all contexts), and womens studies, Disunified Aesthetics is a dynamic and compelling study that frequently manages to escape the confines of form.” Jane Koustas, Department of Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, Brock University
Review
Disunified Aesthetics is quietly intelligent and brilliantly self-reflexive. There are books that document a period or a movement in late twentieth-century Canadian writing but none that offers as extensive a critical engagement with processes of reading the literary texts in question.” Lianne Moyes, Department of English Studies, Université de Montréal
Synopsis
Connecting printed text with performance, this exploration of recent Canadian writing critiques criticism and literature and plays provocatively with the page.
About the Author
Lynette Hunter is Distinguished Professor of the History of Rhetoric and Performance at the University of California, Davis.