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Becoming Posthumous: Life and Death in Literary and Cultural Studies

Jeremy Tambling

March, 2002
Paper, 176 pages,
ISBN: 978-0-7486-1477-6
Edinburgh University Press
$26.50

Set against a backdrop of debates about the so-called “end of history,” “the death of the subject” and “the end of art,” as well as the various forms of the “past” that became prevalent in the late twentieth century, Jeremy Tambling introduces the idea of “the posthumous” as a means of thinking about our relationship to the past, to death and to history. In analyzing selected texts dealing with posthumous existence by Shakespeare, Dickens, Nietzsche, and Benjamin, Tambling provides readings concerned with the question of why we should give attention to history, and to past texts, if there has been an irretrievable 'break' with history, and where history has turned into the heritage industry.

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About the Author

Jeremy Tambling is professor of comparative literature at the University of Hong Kong.

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