Publication
Title
Sheherazade's Notebook : editing textual dysteleology and autographic modernism
Author
Abstract
Critical editions of ‘Complete Works’ are typically organized in a teleological manner, using each of the author's published works as an endpoint. In addition to this useful tradition, this article suggests a ‘dysteleological’ approach. The term ‘dysteleology’, indicating that evolution has no inherent goal, was coined in the years leading up to Modernism. The existence of vestigial organs served as an example to corroborate the ‘dysteleological’ view. A writer's unused notes may be regarded as similarly ‘vestigial’. They are purposeless from a teleological point of view, but they are crucial elements in the study of creative writing processes (‘genetic criticism’). These elements have their rightful place in a scholarly edition, and it is therefore necessary to complement a teleological editorial tradition with a ‘dysteleological’ approach. To corroborate this argument, the article examines works by James Joyce and Samuel Beckett, as well as by less canonical authors such as Raymond Brulez.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Modernist cultures. - Edinburgh, 2006, currens
Publication
Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press , 2020
ISSN
2041-1022 [print]
1753-8629 [online]
DOI
10.3366/MOD.2020.0277
Volume/pages
15 :1 (2020) , p. 12-28
ISI
000598296600002
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
Reassessing Intertextuality: The Case of James Joyce's Digital Library.
James Joyce's Unpublished Letters: A Digital Edition and Text-Genetic Study.
Publication type
Subject
Art 
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 22.07.2020
Last edited 30.10.2024
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