Matthew Scully is Lecturer in American Literature and Culture at the University of Lausanne. His work has appeared in numerous journals, including the Journal of Modern Literature, Diacritics, African American Review, American Literature, Critical Inquiry, and Postmodern Culture.
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Introduction: Democracy's Death Drive 1 Part I: Democratic Aesthetics 1 The Genres of Democracy: Romance, Sentiment, and the Slave Narrative 39 2 Parataxis and Metalepsis, or Figures of Democratic Equality 71 Part II: Aestheticidal Resistance 3 A Poetics of Dissensus: Migrant, Citizen, and the Catachresis of Identity 113 4 Against Representation, or Utopia After All 147 Coda: Disavowal and Figural Annihilation 179 Acknowledgments 183 Notes 187 Bibliography 239 Index 261
All readers of Scully. . . will find their certainties questioned, their convictions probed, and should relish seeing their favorite literary touchstones re-illuminated in the strobe light of political relevance and political impotence.-- "Anglia: Journal of English Philology" Drawing on the work of Jacques Ranciere in particular, Democratic Anarchy offers a compelling theory of democracy and an incisive critique of consensus politics in the United States. Its sharp rhetorical readings of diverse examples of US literature draw out a vision of radical equality beyond the limits of representation.---Christian P. Haines, author of A Desire Called America: Biopolitics, Utopia, and the Literary Commons