The Task of the Critic: Poetics, Philosophy, and Religion

Front Cover
Fordham University Press, 2005 - Literary Criticism - 292 pages

Today's critic must be something of a philosopher as well as a poet. Yet her work
remains above all that of the close reader, and the emergence of the values
embodied by the close reader to stand alongside those of the philosopher and
the poet may be one of the most significant intellectual developments to emerge
in the post-World War II years.
This book analyzes the language poets, Deleuze and Guattari, and above all
Benjamin and Derrida, to trace the various dimensions of the task of the critic.
It concludes with a major chapter on the significance of Derrida's recent work
for the conceptualization of religion, and with an Afterword examining the
role of the Romantic discourse of the fragment in the archeology of all these
discursive strands.
The task of the critic, now invited to pass through the discourses of
philosophy, poetry, and religion beyond that of close reading, has never
been harder--nor have we ever been more in need of it.

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About the author (2005)

Henry Sussman is Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures at Yale University. The most recent of his many books are Idylls of the Wanderer: Outside in Literature and Theory and The Task of the Critic: Poetics, Philosophy, Religion (both Fordham).

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