NEW LITERARY HISTORY, 2000 SPECIAL ISER'S ISSUE |
On the Writings of Wolfgang Iser
New Literary History 31, no.1, Winter 2000
From the Editors
Ralph Cohen sketches Iser’s involvement with New Literary History from the publication of “The Reading Process: A Phenomenological Approach” (1972) to the editing and introducing of the “25th Anniversary Issue” (1994).
Introduction:
Wolfgang Iser’s Aesthetic Politics: Reading as Fieldwork
John Paul Riquelme
Restaging the Reception of Iser’s Early Work, or Sides
Not Taken in Discussions of the Aesthetic
Brook Thomas
Staging as an Anthropological Category
Eric Gans
The Way of the Chameleon in Iser, Beckett, and Yeats: Figuring Death and the Imaginary in The Fictive and the Imaginary
John Paul Riquelme
“If Only I were Not Obliged to Manifest”: Iser’s Aesthetics of Negativity
Gabriele Schwab
A “Figure” in Iser’s “Carpet”
Shlomith Rimmon-Kenan
The Four Sides of Reading: Paradox, Play, and Autobiographical Fiction in Iser and Rilke
Bianca Theisen
The “Imaginary” and Its Enemies
Murray Krieger
Iser’s Anthropological Reception of the Philosophical Tradition
Gabriel Motzkin
The Search for Distance: Negation and Negativity in Wolfgang Iser’s Literary Theory
Winfried Fluck
The Politics of Play: The Social Implications of Iser’s Aesthetic Theory
Paul B. Armstrong