The Little Reviews

October 19, 2021 By: The Editors

A Forum for capsule review of recent books of interest to our readers. If you would like to write a capsule review (250-300 words) of one of the books featured in the Books of Interest section of our more recent print issues, we would welcome your submission at [email protected]. Please include the issue number in which the book is listed in your correspondence.

March 2, 2023 By: Bryan Counter

In literary texts, speech is often taken for granted as simply dialogue delivered by characters. But this assumption belies what occurs in speech between people in everyday life — we interpret speech, we try to see what the speaker really means, beyond what they are saying in a strict sense. Michael Lucey’s intervention with What Proust Heard is to turn a closer eye (and ear) to speech in texts (“language-in-use,” as he calls it) in order to investigate not only what particular speakers might...

July 26, 2022 By: Jacob DeBrock

Nadia Nurhussein’s 2019 book, Black Land: Imperial Ethiopianism and African America, analyzes the literature and texts being produced in response to broader Western interest in Ethiopia and its leadership during an 80-year stretch of Black history from the 1860s to the 1940s. Drawing on a wide range of materials such as poetry, novels, newspaper articles, and theatrical or cinematic performances, Nurhussein demonstrates not only how entrenched these conversations were in African Americans’ lives but also the ways that this interest created a paradox: How does one advocate for Black freedom when the focal point of the Ethiopians’ fight is a monarchy that is bent on expanding its territory, little different from the Europeans that threaten it?

April 28, 2022 By: Galen D. Bunting

“The ghost of Roger Casement / Is beating on the door.” So runs the refrain of William Butler Yeats’ “The Ghost of Roger Casement.” An imperialist who wrote scathing reports of colonial human rights abuses in the Congo and Brazil, Roger Casement sought German military aid for the 1916 Easter Rising: the British government arrested, sentenced, and hanged Casement for high treason. In her new study, The Literary Afterlives of Roger Casement, 1899-2016, Alison Garden frames her inquiry within the language of haunting and intervenes in Casement’s very indeterminacy: “towards the repetition of an unfinished history; the particularly ghostly fashioning of Casement’s literary afterlives” (14).

April 28, 2022 By: Aidan Watson-Morris

When fiction narrates speech, who is talking? Even for those who typically understand modernist fiction as skeptical of straightforward representational uses of language, scholars tend to assume that fictional characters mean the words they speak: that Bartleby would prefer not to and that Molly Bloom says yes. Elizabeth Alsop’s Making Conversation in Modernist Fiction offers a subtle, significant provocation, challenging mimetic interpretations of dialogue in modernist fiction.
Print Plus Exclusive

What Proust Heard: Novels and the Ethnography of Talk by Michael Lucey

March 2, 2023 By: Bryan Counter

Volume 7 Cycle 3

Tags:

Two men talking
What Proust Heard: Novels and the Ethnography of Talk. Michael Lucey. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 2022. Pp. 346. $105.00 (cloth); $35.00 (paper); $34.99 (PDF).

In literary texts, speech is often taken for granted as simply dialogue delivered by characters. But this assumption belies what occurs in speech between people in everyday life — we interpret speech, we try to see what the speaker really means, beyond what they are saying in a strict sense. Michael Lucey’s intervention with What Proust Heard is to turn a closer eye (and ear) to speech in texts (“language-in-use,” as he calls it) in order to investigate not only what particular speakers might really mean, but how their speech consistently draws upon, and draws together, the aesthetic and cultural valences of language and life, whether it is intended or not.

Drawing from Bourdieu and other key figures in linguistic anthropology, the main literary focus of this book is Proust’s Recherche, whose moments of speech in large part concern how characters position themselves in relation to works of art and aesthetic experience. In particular, though Proust’s hero positions himself as a listener and interpreter of others’ speech as data as if he were standing outside of or beyond any social scenario, he himself turns out to be constantly offering “data, not only for the narrator at other moments, but also, we might say, for the novel itself, for its own larger project (which takes place in a frame that exceeds any instance of the narrator’s consciousness) of exploring language-in-use” (37-38). Lucey’s reading of Proust proceeds with this paradox in mind, and through careful readings of several passages representing and problematizing speech and its interpretation he shows how, “right up to the end,” the narrator speaks and, furthermore, speaks about speaking (295).

Lucey also examines passages from Dostoevsky, Balzac, George Eliot, Virginia Woolf, Nathalie Sarraute, and Rachel Cusk. In a third “Interlude” dealing with Sarraute and Cusk in particular, he tackles the question of tone, which leads to a consideration of the dialectical relation between textual intention, in terms of the indexical signs a novel emits, and the reader’s sensitivity to those signs. In short, What Proust Heard is a nuanced call for readers to better hear what is said in, and by, literature.