Jameson at 90: A Verso Blog Series – updated

Jameson at 90: A Verso Blog Series

Fredric Jameson turns 90 years old this month. To celebrate this milestone, we’re publishing a series of short essays focused on the major books in Jameson’s oeuvre.

Several new entries added recently.

Unintimidated languages – Daniel Hartley

On prophetic form and the whole tangled, dripping mass of the dialectic – Christopher Breu

Intense Curiosity – Matthew Beaumont

On Fredric Jameson’s Fables of Aggression – Ian Buchanan

History is what hurts – Maria Elisa Cevasco

Deep Listening – Phillip E. Wegner

Synchronic History – Kristin Ross

Negative Dialectics – C.D. Blanton

Historicizing the Present – Robert T. Tally

Inevitable Negations – Clint Burnham

Orienting towards the social totality – Alberto Toscano

Utopia Hurts – Christian P. Haines

On Brecht and Method – Olivier Neveux

Losing Historicity – Kirk Boyle

The becoming cultural of the economic, and vice versa – Xudong Zhang

Imagining Utopia – Gerry Canavan

Rereading “On Rereading Doktor Faustus” – Nicholas Brown

Jameson’s complex chord – Sianne Ngai

The Rebus in Fredric Jameson’s The Hegel Variations – Andrew Cole

Marxist interpretation as a vocation – Anna Kornbluh


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