A new course from FASS: LIT 452 Seminar in World Literature
Writing Catastrophe, Reading Catastrophe
Matthew Gumpert
Western culture has long been in love with catastrophe. Truth itself is understood as something
transcendent, or something hidden: our very notion of interpretation is determined, in other
words, by an apocalyptic logic. The very strategies for reading in the West, or what we might call
hermeneutics, is a form of catastrophe theory.
It is possible, then, that all literature depends on catastrophe; that catastrophe is intrinsic to
literature itself. This course returns to some of the West’s most significant literary texts; read
in the light of contemporary works in philosophy and critical theory, these texts form a kind of
history of the catastrophic. Along the way a dialogue will emerge between literature and theory:
one that will allow us to construct a typology of catastrophe in the West.
Throughout the semester various contemporary disasters, both natural and unnatural, from the
2004 tsunami to 9/11, will figure as recurrent motifs and contemporary points of reference.