Lauren Berlant is George M. Pullman Distinguished Service Professor
of English at the University of Chicago. She is author of Cruel
Optimism and The Female Complaint, both also published
by Duke University Press.
Kathleen Stewart is Professor of Anthropology at the University of
Texas, Austin, and author of Ordinary Affects, also
published by Duke University Press.
"In Berlant and Stewart's hands, affect theory provides a way of
understanding the sensations and resignations of the present, the
normalized exhaustion that comes with life in the new economy. It
is a way of framing uniquely modern questions." -- Hua Hsu * The
New Yorker *
"The seemingly arbitrary parameters Berlant and Stewart put in
place act out an illuminating thought experiment for the reader. .
. . A haunting and thought-provoking read that asks readers to slow
down and take stock of what is in front of them." -- Julia Shiota *
Ploughshares *
"A roving adventure in critical prose. . . . Berlant and Stewart
eschew a literary focal point for a broadly questioning spirit. . .
. The point is not to 'track thing into their secret lairs,' or to
place them in the 'so-called big picture,' rather, it is to look
again, and encourage the reader look again too." -- Michael Caines
* TLS *
"The Hundreds is playful and loose, it roams and discovers,
only to drift elsewhere, but it works: it grounds theory, makes it
real." -- Casey Dawson and Christopher Schaberg * Los Angeles
Review of Books *
"The Hundreds focalizes an intrinsic desire to explore the
world's simplicities as the foundation for the potentiality of the
extraordinary. Berlant and Stewart show that, indeed, ordinary life
is ordinary and transformative, containing so many possibilities
for thinking about who we are in the world, really." -- Matt
Morgenstern * Cleveland Review of Books *
"The Hundreds, by cultural theorist Lauren Berlant and
anthropologist Kathleen Stewart, is at once a bold thought
experiment and a radical exploration of reflexive ethnographic
writing. . . . The Hundreds is a must read for scholars
interested in affect as another register of human experience that
exists alongside the psychological and phenomenological." -- Asha
L. Abeyasekera * Feminism & Psychology *
"As compositions, the hundreds illuminate and obscure,
defamiliarize and refamiliarize, reflect and refract (tip of the
cap to Volosinov 1973) both their authors and the cultural
artifacts that appear in them, and offer a way of archiving
cultural moments in ways that acknowledge, even foreground, their
affective power." -- Seth Kahn * Anthropological Quarterly *
"A speculative and seductive book. . . . The Hundreds asks
us to pay attention to the capacious and crucial smallness of our
everyday, to slow down and dial in to the richness and frustrations
of ordinary encounters as a grounding and creative political
practice." -- Elisabeth R. Anker * Theory & Event *
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