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Experimental Criticism

Patricia McManus

Franco Moretti and Literature

Barcode 9781804295076
Paperback

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Release Date: 27/01/2026

Genre: Literary Criticism
Translator: Richard Braude
Label: Verso Books
Contributors: Federico Bertoni (Contributions by), Jérôme David (Contributions by), Giuseppe Episcopo (Contributions by), Francesco Fiorentino (Contributions by), Françoise Lavocat (Contributions by), Guido Mazzoni (Contributions by), Patricia McManus (Contributions by), Andrea Miconi (Contributions by), Mads Rosendahl Thomsen (Contributions by), Gisèle Sapiro (Contributions by), Enrica Villari (Contributions by), Francesco de Cristofaro (Edited by), Stefano Ercolino (Edited by), Franco Moretti (Contributions by), Richard Braude (Translated by)
Language: English, Italian
Publisher: Verso Books

Franco Moretti and Literature
Experimental Criticism offers a series of close critical engagements with one of the world's most innovative literary thinkers. Franco Moretti, author of such major works as Signs Taken for Wonders, The Way of the World, Modern Epic, Atlas of the European Novel and The Bourgeois, may be best known for his 'distant reading' of vast numbers of literary texts at the Stanford Literary Lab. Francesco de Cristofaro and Stefano Ercolino lead a lively exploration of his work as a springboard for rethinking the fundamentals of literary studies.

Topics include literary theory and method, problems of scale and canonisation, the evolution of literary forms, abstract modelling and the digital humanities, comparative versus world literature, Marxism and literary history, and tragedy and the novel. There are essays from Moretti himself on Lukács and the tensions between close and distant reading, plus a 'provisional epilogue' in which he reflects on his intellectual itinerary and the challenges posed by contributors to this volume. 'Why study literature?' he asks. For the pleasure of reducing complex things to their simple elements; to bring them back to earth.

This key retrospective amounts to a critical manifesto for an experimental literary materialism, one unafraid to test radical new hypotheses.