Open Secrets
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Table of Contents

@fmct:Contents @toc4:Acknowledgments iii Preface iii @toc2:1 Toward a Theory of Recessive Action 000 2 L'aveu sans suite: Love's Open Secret in Lafayette's La Princesse de Cl'ves 000 3 Lying Lightly: Lyric Inconsequence in Wordsworth, Dickinson and Hardy 000 4 Fanny's "Labour of Privacy" and the Accommodation of Virtue in Austen's Mansfield Park 000 @toc4:Works Cited 000 Index 000

About the Author

Anne-Lise François is Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Berkeley.

Reviews

"Open Secrets is a profoundly original and exquisitely written book, one of the most important publications in its field in many years. Anne-Lise Francois develops here an idiom that can help us attend to the quiet mystery of literary experience - an experience that claims us but makes no demand on us, and retreats from any demand we address to it. Carefully distinguishing her concerns from those of deconstruction, new historicism, and other critical positions, and engaging relevant aspects of the thought of many theorists of desire, representation, and subjectivity, Francois elaborates a critical perspective that at once seeks to remain faithful to literary instances of "event-less experience," yet also teaches us how much can be said in the proximity of such moments." - Marc Redfield, The Claremont Graduate University "The dazzling analyses on display in Open Secrets are so original and far-reaching that, taken together, they constitute something like a new paradigm for literary study. Attentive to the unattended and the inconspicuously significant, Francois teases out the real dynamics in one resonant example after another, in the lyric and the novel. An altogether singular achievement that will be reckoned with for years to come." - Ian Balfour, York University "Reader, beware: this ambitious book aims to change our entire literary-critical perspective. Its 'mirror of steel uninsistence' (to adapt Marianne Moore's phrase) brings out in the poets and novelists discussed the non-teleological aspects of their work, the incidence of 'non-emphatic revelation,' the presence of an 'open secret' attributed by Goethe to Nature itself. In seeking to change a mode of discourse, by shifting its terminological axis from action to a contemplative and passionate recessiveness, Francois makes us see a counterplot to fiction's 'powers of plot,' so that evanescence, and even inconsequence, are given their weight, or more precisely a 'weightless gain.' It is a book no reader concerned about the 'nothingness' of literary reflection can lightly pass by." - Geoffrey Hartman, Yale University "The greatest merit of Open Secrets is the way in which its attention to the intrinsic sufficiency of minimal experiences allows us to appreciate the continuity between many of the dominant critical paradigms in postmodern thought and Enlightenment models of action-as-production Francois's readings of literature not only reveal a stunning capacity to concentrate on formal details, but also to manage to put forward interpretations that future critics of the works in question will likely have to contend with for a long time to come." - Postmodern Culture "The greatest merit of Open Secrets is the way in which its attention to the intrinsic sufficiency of minimal experiences allows us to appreciate the continuity between many of the dominant critical paradigms in postmodern thought and Enlightenment models of action-as-production Francois's readings of literature not only reveal a stunning capacity to concentrate on formal details, but also to manage to put forward interpretations that future critics of the works in question will likely have to contend with for a long time to come." - Postmodern Culture

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