A we without us: Collective disoccupation in late 20th century French poetry

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportPh.d.-afhandlingForskning

Standard

A we without us : Collective disoccupation in late 20th century French poetry. / Gråbøl, Morten Chemnitz.

Københavns Universitet, 2023. 238 s.

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportPh.d.-afhandlingForskning

Harvard

Gråbøl, MC 2023, A we without us: Collective disoccupation in late 20th century French poetry. Københavns Universitet.

APA

Gråbøl, M. C. (2023). A we without us: Collective disoccupation in late 20th century French poetry. Københavns Universitet.

Vancouver

Gråbøl MC. A we without us: Collective disoccupation in late 20th century French poetry. Københavns Universitet, 2023. 238 s.

Author

Gråbøl, Morten Chemnitz. / A we without us : Collective disoccupation in late 20th century French poetry. Københavns Universitet, 2023. 238 s.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{3e34d5bf06314c1f976285f3e57467f5,
title = "A we without us: Collective disoccupation in late 20th century French poetry",
abstract = "The PhD thesis analyses forms of non-affirmative collectivity in late 20th century French poetry through four chapters on four different poets: Edmond Jab{\`e}s, Andr{\'e}s du Bouchet, Claude Royet- Journoud and Anne-Marie Albiach. The main analytic focus of the PhD is the use of the first person plural pronoun, the nous (we/us) in selected works of the four poets. Collective positions which in the works examined here most often appear in negative or passive constructions; forms of collectivity that are non-affirmative, directionless and unanchored. On the basis of the function of this nous, I discuss the problem guiding this PhD: what does the demise of the lyrical subject, which marks French poetry of the period, imply for notions of collectivity and communality. I argue that it is possible to discern in French poetry of the 1960s and 1970s what I call a poetics of collective disoccupation; an evasion of the position of enunciation which gives rise to a rethinking of non-identitarian forms of collectivity. Throughout the thesis, the non-affirmative forms of collectivity that I analyse in the poetry are set in critical dialogue with reflections on an inoperative community as elaborated by Jean-Luc Nancy, Maurice Blanchot and Giorgio Agamben. The aim of the PhD is thus both historical and theoretical. On the one hand, through the four chapters on four poets, I draw attention to a line in the history of French poetry that is largely neglected in the critical literature. On the other hand, the PhD aims to provide a poetological and theoretical contribution to the reflections upon a community based not on identification, figuration and self- affirmation, but upon inoperativity, disoccupation and non-unitarian forms of relation. The main methodological ambition of the thesis is the co-thinking of textuality and communality, of poetic connectivity and social collectivity; an exploration of what it means to read the form of the poem as communal form; to read the fragile, open, non-affirmative linkage of its disparate parts, its literal precariousness, as a rethinking of how togetherness, solidarity and collectivity might be articulated.",
author = "Gr{\aa}b{\o}l, {Morten Chemnitz}",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
publisher = "K{\o}benhavns Universitet",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - A we without us

T2 - Collective disoccupation in late 20th century French poetry

AU - Gråbøl, Morten Chemnitz

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The PhD thesis analyses forms of non-affirmative collectivity in late 20th century French poetry through four chapters on four different poets: Edmond Jabès, Andrés du Bouchet, Claude Royet- Journoud and Anne-Marie Albiach. The main analytic focus of the PhD is the use of the first person plural pronoun, the nous (we/us) in selected works of the four poets. Collective positions which in the works examined here most often appear in negative or passive constructions; forms of collectivity that are non-affirmative, directionless and unanchored. On the basis of the function of this nous, I discuss the problem guiding this PhD: what does the demise of the lyrical subject, which marks French poetry of the period, imply for notions of collectivity and communality. I argue that it is possible to discern in French poetry of the 1960s and 1970s what I call a poetics of collective disoccupation; an evasion of the position of enunciation which gives rise to a rethinking of non-identitarian forms of collectivity. Throughout the thesis, the non-affirmative forms of collectivity that I analyse in the poetry are set in critical dialogue with reflections on an inoperative community as elaborated by Jean-Luc Nancy, Maurice Blanchot and Giorgio Agamben. The aim of the PhD is thus both historical and theoretical. On the one hand, through the four chapters on four poets, I draw attention to a line in the history of French poetry that is largely neglected in the critical literature. On the other hand, the PhD aims to provide a poetological and theoretical contribution to the reflections upon a community based not on identification, figuration and self- affirmation, but upon inoperativity, disoccupation and non-unitarian forms of relation. The main methodological ambition of the thesis is the co-thinking of textuality and communality, of poetic connectivity and social collectivity; an exploration of what it means to read the form of the poem as communal form; to read the fragile, open, non-affirmative linkage of its disparate parts, its literal precariousness, as a rethinking of how togetherness, solidarity and collectivity might be articulated.

AB - The PhD thesis analyses forms of non-affirmative collectivity in late 20th century French poetry through four chapters on four different poets: Edmond Jabès, Andrés du Bouchet, Claude Royet- Journoud and Anne-Marie Albiach. The main analytic focus of the PhD is the use of the first person plural pronoun, the nous (we/us) in selected works of the four poets. Collective positions which in the works examined here most often appear in negative or passive constructions; forms of collectivity that are non-affirmative, directionless and unanchored. On the basis of the function of this nous, I discuss the problem guiding this PhD: what does the demise of the lyrical subject, which marks French poetry of the period, imply for notions of collectivity and communality. I argue that it is possible to discern in French poetry of the 1960s and 1970s what I call a poetics of collective disoccupation; an evasion of the position of enunciation which gives rise to a rethinking of non-identitarian forms of collectivity. Throughout the thesis, the non-affirmative forms of collectivity that I analyse in the poetry are set in critical dialogue with reflections on an inoperative community as elaborated by Jean-Luc Nancy, Maurice Blanchot and Giorgio Agamben. The aim of the PhD is thus both historical and theoretical. On the one hand, through the four chapters on four poets, I draw attention to a line in the history of French poetry that is largely neglected in the critical literature. On the other hand, the PhD aims to provide a poetological and theoretical contribution to the reflections upon a community based not on identification, figuration and self- affirmation, but upon inoperativity, disoccupation and non-unitarian forms of relation. The main methodological ambition of the thesis is the co-thinking of textuality and communality, of poetic connectivity and social collectivity; an exploration of what it means to read the form of the poem as communal form; to read the fragile, open, non-affirmative linkage of its disparate parts, its literal precariousness, as a rethinking of how togetherness, solidarity and collectivity might be articulated.

M3 - Ph.D. thesis

BT - A we without us

PB - Københavns Universitet

ER -

ID: 362979918