William Egginton

Last updated
William Egginton
JHU8865.jpg
Born1969
Syracuse, New York
Occupation Literary Critic, Literary Theorist, Philosopher, Professor at The Johns Hopkins University
LanguageEnglish, Spanish, German, Italian, French
Nationality American
Alma mater Dartmouth College, Stanford University
Subject Spanish and Latin American Literature, Cervantes, Borges, Fictionality, Psychoanalysis, Continental Philosophy
Spouse Bernadette Wegenstein

William Egginton (born 1969) [1] is a literary critic and philosopher. He has written extensively on a broad range of subjects, including theatricality, fictionality, literary criticism, psychoanalysis and ethics, religious moderation, and theories of mediation.

Contents

Life and career

William Egginton was born in Syracuse, New York in 1969. He received his PhD in Comparative Literature from Stanford University in 1999. His doctoral thesis, "Theatricality and Presence: a Phenomenology of Space and Spectacle in Early Modern France and Spain," was written under the direction of Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht. He currently resides in Baltimore with his spouse, Bernadette Wegenstein. William Egginton is Decker Professor in the Humanities, Chair of the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures, and Director of the Alexander Grass Humanities Institute at the Johns Hopkins University, where he teaches Spanish and Latin American literature, literary theory, and the relation between literature and philosophy. [2] [3]

Works

William Egginton is the author of How the World Became a Stage (2003), Perversity and Ethics (2006), A Wrinkle in History (2007), The Philosopher's Desire (2007), The Theater of Truth (2010), In Defense of Religious Moderation (2011), The Man Who Invented Fiction: How Cervantes Ushered In the Modern World (2016), The Splintering of the American Mind: Identity, Inequality, and Community on Today's College Campuses (2018),The Rigor of Angels: Borges, Heisenberg, Kant, and the Ultimate Nature of Reality (2023), and Alejandro Jodorowsky:Filmmaker and Philosopher (2024). The Rigor of Angels was selected as one of the "Best Books of 2023" by The New Yorker [4] and was described as "challenging, ambitious, and elegant" by The New York Times, who included that work in its 2023 list of "Notable Books" [5] and as one of nine "Critics' Picks" in 2023. [6] The Rigor of Angels was also mentioned as a close contender for the New York Times "10 Best Books of 2023" during an episode of its The Book Review podcast. [7]

Egginton is the co-author of Medialogies: Reading Reality in the Age of Inflationary Media (2017) and What Would Cervantes Do?: Navigating Post-Truth with Spanish Baroque Literature (2022). What Would Cervantes Do? was the subject of a special issue of Hispanic Issues in 2023. [8] He is also co-editor with Mike Sandbothe of The Pragmatic Turn in Philosophy (2004), translator of Lisa Block de Behar's Borges, the Passion of an Endless Quotation (2003, 2nd edition 2014), and co-editor with David E. Johnson of Thinking With Borges (2009).

Selected bibliography

Books

Edited and translated books

  • Second edition and translation of Lisa Block de Behar, Borges: The Passion of an Endless Quotation, SUNY Press, 2014
  • Co-editor, with David E. Johnson, Thinking With Borges, Aurora, CO: The Davies Group Publishers, 2009
  • Borges: The Passion of an Endless Quotation, by Lisa Block de Behar, translated and with an introduction by William Egginton, Albany: SUNY Press, 2003
  • Co-editor, with Mike Sandbothe, The Pragmatic Turn in Philosophy: Contemporary Engagements Between Analytic and Continental Thought, Albany: SUNY Press, 2004
  • Co-editor, with Jeffrey T. Schnapp and Peter Gilgen, Disciplining Literature. Stanford Humanities Review 6.1 (1998)

Chapters in books

  • “Jodorowsky, Psychomagic, and Subjective Destitution,” in ReFocus: The Films of Alejandro Jodorowsky, ed. Michael Witte (Edinburgh and London: Edinburgh University Press, 2023)
  • “Realism/New Realism,” in The Vattimo Dictionary, ed. Simonetta Moro (Edinburgh and London: Edinburgh University Press, 2023), 163-165
  • “Foreword,” in Un-Deceptions: Cervantine Strategies For the Disinformation Age, by David Castillo (Newark, Delaware: Juan de la Cuesta, 2021)
  • “Cervantes, Reality Literacy and Fundamentalism.” Cervantes and the New Millennium. Ed. Bruce Burningham, Millennial Cervantes, UNC Press, 2020
  • “Cervantes’s Treatment of Otherness, Contamination, and Conventional Ideals in Persiles and Other Works,” with David Castillo, in Cervantes’ Persiles, ed., Marina Brownlee, University of Toronto Press, 2019, 205-222
  • “The Apocalypse Will Not Be Televised! Baroque Lessons in Apocalypticism, Demagoguery, and Reality Literacy,” with David Castillo, Writing in the End Times: Apocalyptic Imagination in the Hispanic World, Hispanic Issues Online Issue 23 (2019); 16-30, https://cla.umn.edu/sites/cla.umn.edu/files/hiol_23_01_castillo_and_egginton.pdf
  • “The Screen Behind the Screen: A Penultimate Response to a Polemical Companion,” with David Castillo, in A Polemical Companion to Medialogies: Reading Reality in the Age of Inflationary Media. Eds. Bradley Nelson and Julio Baena. HIOL Debates 8 (2017): 132-146. Web.
  • “Afterword,” with David Castillo, in Freakish Encounters: Constructions of the Freak in Hispanic Cultures, ed. Luis Martin Estudillo, 2018: https://cla.umn.edu/hispanic-issues/online/volume-20-freakish-encounters
  • “The Philosopher’s Baroque: Benjamin, Lacan, Deleuze,” in the Oxford Handbook to the Baroque, ed. John D. Lyons, Oxford University Press, 2019, 487-496
  • “What Kind of Humanities Do We Want or Need in the 21stCentury?” with David Castillo, in López-Calvo, Ignacio and Christina Lux, eds.  Humanities and Post-Truth in the Information Age (Northwestern UP, 2019)
  • “What Are We Talking About When We Talk About Zombies?” The Philosophical Salon: Speculations, Reflections, Interventions, eds. Michael Marder and Patricia Vieira, London, Open Humanities Press, 2017, 121-24
  • “The Empire of Solitude,” with David Castillo, The Philosophical Salon: Speculations, Reflections, Interventions, eds. Michael Marder and Patricia Vieira, London, Open Humanities Press, 2017, 37-41
  • Can Neuroscience Overturn Roe v. Wade?" in The Stone Reader: Modern Philosophy in 133 Arguments, eds. Peter Catapano and Simon Critchley, New York: Norton, 2016.
  • "The Limits of the Coded World," in The Stone Reader: Modern Philosophy in 133 Arguments, eds. Peter Catapano and Simon Critchley, New York: Norton, 2016.
  • "Bodies in Motion: An Exchange," with Alex Rosenberg, in The Stone Reader: Modern Philosophy in 133 Arguments, eds. Peter Catapano and Simon Critchley, New York: Norton, 2016.
  • "Afterword: What Are We Talking About When We Talk About Zombies," in Castillo, Schmid, Reilly, and Browning, Zombie Talk: Culture, History, Politics, New York: Palgrave, 2016, 106-114.
  • "Borges on Eternity," in Eternity, a History, ed. Yitzhak Y. Melamed, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016, 277-282.
  • "Crime Shows—CSI: Hapsburg Madrid," in Peter Goodrich and Valerie Hayaert (eds), Genealogies of Legal Vision, London: Routledge, 2015, 243-58
  • "The Eradication of Transcendence," in Braidotti et al. eds, The Postsecular Turn, 2014
  • "Potentiality of Life," in Silvia Mazzini ed., Reading Hermeneutic Communism, Continuum, 2014
  • "Staging the Event: The Theatrical Ground of Metaphysical Framing," in Michael Marder and Santiago Zabala, eds. Being Shaken, Palgrave, 2014, 177-85
  • "¿Tolerancia o fundamentalismo: una pregunta contemporánea," interview collected in Diálogos en la Finis Terrae: Entrevistas de Marco Antonio de la Parra, ed. Constanza López (Santiago de Chile: Ediciones Finis Terrae, 2013): 39-50
  • "Neither Here nor There: The Everyday Dialectics of Manuel Cruz," in Vivir para pensar, eds. Fina Birulés, Antonio Gómez Ramos and Concha Roldán, Madrid: Paidós, 2011
  • "Three Versions of Divisibility: Borges, Kant, and the Quantum," Thinking With Borges, eds. Egginton and Johnson, Aurora, CO, The Davies Group, 2009, 53-72
  • Co-author, with Bernadette Wegenstein, UNESCO Online Encyclopedia of Social Sciences and Humanities—"Media Impact on Literature" entry, (2008)
  • "Intimacy and Anonymity, or How the Audience Became a Crowd," Crowds, eds. Jeffrey T. Schnapp and Matthew Tiews, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2007, 97-110
  • "Keeping Pragmatism Pure: Rorty with Lacan," in Egginton and Sandbothe, eds., The Pragmatic Turn in Philosophy: Contemporary Engagements Between Analytic and Continental Thought (Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 2004)
  • "Sobre el espaciamiento: el espacio paranoico del Dr. Francia," in Espacios y discurosos compartidos en la literatura de América Latina. Actas del Coloquio Internacional del Comité de Estudios Latinoamericanos de la Asociación Internacional de Literatura Comparada, ed. Biagio D'Angelo (Lima: Fondo Editorial de la Universidad Católica Sedes Sapientiae-Fondo, Editorial de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, 2003) 102-110
  • "Facing the Defacement of Death: Heidegger, Deleuze, and García Lorca," Convergencias Hispanicas: Selected Proceedings And Other Essays On Spanish And Latin American Literature, Film, And Linguistics, eds. Elizabeth Scarlett and Howard B.Wescott (Juan de la Cuesta Hispanic Monographs, 2002) 103-118
  • "Mímesis e teatralidade," in Mascaras da mimesis: a obra de Luiz Costa Lima (Rio de Janeiro: Record Editora, 1999) 321-342

Articles and other publications

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References

  1. "Egginton, William, 1969- - LC Linked Data Service (Library of Congress)". id.loc.gov. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  2. "| ARCADE". ARCADE. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  3. "Man in the Middle". Johns Hopkins Magazine. Retrieved 2016-01-28.
  4. "The Best Books of 2023". The New Yorker. 2023-01-25. Retrieved 2023-12-30.
  5. Staff, The New York Times Books (2023-11-21). "100 Notable Books of 2023". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2023-12-30.
  6. Szalai, Jennifer; Jacobs, Alexandra; Garner, Dwight (2023-12-03). "The Critics' Picks: A Year in Reading". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2023-12-31.
  7. "Talking About the 10 Best Books of 2023". The New York Times. 2023-11-28. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2023-12-30.
  8. "Vol.11: Handling the Truth: A Debates Volume on What Would Cervantes Do? Navigating Post-Truth with Spanish Baroque Literature". College of Liberal Arts. Retrieved 2023-12-30.