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Description
Distinguished literary and film theorists convene to engage with Garrett Stewart's twenty books of inter-medial analysis, shelved across several disciplines, in a collection of essays as multifaceted and resonant as Stewart's own writing.
Critical luminaries from the fields of literary and film studies assess the methods and scope of Garrett Stewart's career-long work across the fields of literary history and poetics, cinema and media studies. The unprecedented scope of Stewart's interests also embraces certain lines of development in art history down through the so-called post-medium condition, including abstract as well as figurative painting, conceptual book sculpture-followed by an interactive e-text monograph on the place of time-based images in contemporary gallery installation. Through it all, under the rubric of what Stewart calls “narratography,” there is a continual return to microplots of fictional phrasing, from Victorian novels to post-millennial American fiction. Given Stewart's steadily tuned ear for the play of vocal enunciation, his interests arc in this way from a performative phonetics of print text to a study of star-singing on screen.
Assorted essays variously analyze directly, or extrapolate from, Stewart's evolving methodology: a “signature” analytic intensity tested in its yield on interpretive challenges from literary prose and art history through cinema theory and screen stardom. Bandwidths accompanies a companion volume, Attention Spans-Stewart's “autobiographical,” or better, autophilosophical chronicle of method and evolution. Contributors to Bandwidths either address Stewart's aims and achievements directly or build implicitly on them in fresh investigations of their own.
Bandwidths is a rare window into the genealogy, and contested energies, of interpretive endeavor, and offers interpretive and methodological interventions into fields ready to be reminded and recharged by Stewart's stalwart catalogue of indefatigable literary-critical and intermedial offerings.
Table of Contents
David LaRocca
Part I / Audited Text
1. Voiceover (Herbert F. Tucker, University of Virginia, USA)
Writing the Voice (Garrett Stewart)
2. Stewart-reading: An Art of Attention (Susan J. Wolfson, Princeton University, USA)
The Sound of One Hand Raised (Garrett Stewart)
Part II / Close (and Too-Close) Viewing
3. Apparatus and Dispositif: A Three-Dimensional Look at the Cinema Screen (Dudley Andrew, Emeritus, Yale University, USA)
Depth Perception (Garrett Stewart)
4. Hitchcock's Little Mistakes (Dial M for Murder) (D. A. Miller, Emeritus, University of California, Berkeley, USA)
The Man Who Sees Too Much (Garrett Stewart)
Part III / Screen Narratography / Reflex Reading
5. Reading the Voice's Places: Narratography and the Streisand Sound (James Chandler, University of Chicago, USA)
Graphing Voice's S/pace (Garrett Stewart)
6. Reading Itself (William H. Galperin, Emeritus, Rutgers University, USA)
Guilty Pleasures? (Garrett Stewart)
Part IV / Cinemachinations
7. Time, Space, and the Frame: On the Vicissitudes of the Off-Screen (Daniel Morgan, University of Chicago, USA)
Time Pieces (Garrett Stewart)
8. Understanding That Media Understand Media, Or, a Life in the Hall of Cinematic Mirrors (Paul Young, Dartmouth College, USA)
Parallel Homage (Garrett Stewart)
Part V / Cultural Ma(r)kers: immersion and Performance
9. Immersion: The Spectator Gets Into It (Paul H. Fry, Emeritus, Yale University, USA)
Wading In, Weighing In (Garrett Stewart)
10. Two of the Great Italicizers: Barbra Streisand and Elaine May (Ross Posnock, Columbia University, USA)
Diva-gations (Garrett Stewart)
Part VI / Demediation / Transmedium
11. Infratextuality and the Art of Samuel Levi Jones (Bill Brown, University of Chicago, USA)
From Textual Refuse to Conceptual Reuse (Garrett Stewart)
12. Paraphones for Garrett Stewart (John Cayley, Brown University, USA)
Battery Level High: Earphones Recharged (Garrett Stewart)
Part VII / Medium 1.0: Wording the World
13. Mirror, Mirror (Timothy Gould, Emeritus, Metropolitan State University, USA)
Figuring a Way (Garrett Stewart)
Contributors
Product details
| Published | 23 Jan 2025 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 288 |
| ISBN | 9798765113004 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Here is a volume of writing about voices, faces, sentences, songs, paintings, spelling, mirrors, reading, technology, time, and other objects of considerable interest. How could one evoke and study such diverse matters without getting lost? We may not know the answer, but this book does. Its themes divide but its many roads keep meeting. Language is not only a medium but a source of light. A film looks out at its viewer and back at the material it is made of. No one splits hairs here, but many of the writers like to split words. The result isn't always immediately intelligible, but it is always, to borrow an example from Garrett Stewart, intel/legible. An amazing work of critical theory and practice.
Michael Wood, Professor Emeritus of English, Princeton University, USA
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Garrett Stewart's longtime readers will be familiar with a feeling of pleasant incredulity: how can anyone read this widely and always this well? In gathering an A-team of equally intense critics around him, Bandwidths offers something else almost beyond belief: a dazzling group intellectual experience that is also intensely moving-a snapshot of literary and cultural criticism at its collective best.
David Kurnick, Professor of English, Rutgers University, USA
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With the vast philosophical erudition and rigorous analytical skills that are his trademark, David LaRocca here brilliantly introduces Garrett Stewart's unique body of readings and writings, 'across media,' while bringing together an original and reasoned set of critical interventions by distinctive commentators (all specialists in their respective fields). What results is a groundbreaking and wide-ranging work, an intellectual adventure of dazzling intensity, that is bound to become a standard reference for any future engagement with-and further elaboration of-Stewart's 'inter-medial' approach and the refreshing insights and methods it continues to inspire and effect in literary and historical investigations of modern narrative and poetics, as well as in contemporary visual arts and media studies.
Hent de Vries, Paulette Goddard Professor of the Humanities, New York University, USA



















