From: chintz@epas.utoronto.ca (Carrie Hintz) Subject: The Devil's Dictionary of Literary Terms To: adorno@world.std.com Date: Sun, 13 Feb 1994 16:02:34 -0500 (EST) ...................................................................... THE DEVIL'S DICTIONARY OF LITERARY TERMS [chintz@epas.utoronto.ca] ATTENTION critics, scholars, writers, paragons of wit! Does the current crop of literary glossaries, encyclopedias, and indices make your eyes glaze over? Have you ever suppressed a sneer at a particular school of criticism, a baffling exemplum of Lit. Crit. jargon, or even at the entire discipline of literary studies? Do you agree that the most entertaining academic disagreements should no longer be relegated to the letters columns of book review journals? If so, take heed: you can finally do something about it! The editors of THE DEVIL'S DICTIONARY OF LITERARY TERMS have conspired to provide a public forum for the critical disgruntlement which until now has been suppressed in the name of scholarly propriety. Those other dictionaries have no sense of the inherent absurdity of the academic study of literature, and therefore don't allow for the scornful repartee and whimsical commentary which will characterize our dictionary. You are invited to send us as many original definitions as you wish. Choose a term, a theoretical approach, or a literary personage, and let loose a volley of your most scintillating wit. Be assured that others will be merrily attacking the literary theories YOU hold most dear. The completed DICTIONARY will be a compendium of bemused reflections, pointed critiques and satiric reformulations. Each definition will have a by-line to identify its author. Don't miss the chance to add your voice to the most heteroglossic glossary ever! Anything goes, style-wise. Here are a few sample definitions, but don't feel obligated to imitate their format: Allegoresis: A text-specific form of paranoia, in which the patient appears to find a rigid structure of meaning beneath the "surface" of the text. Baudrillardian: Someone who may not believe in Santa Claus but certainly believes in the omnipresence of Disneyland. Irony: A conjuring. The true ironist is not the speaker but the perceiver, who insists on pulling something out of nothing's hat. MLA: Hypercarnivalesque. Attendees display a remarkable disseverment of the link between the upper, reasoning portion of the body and the "material bodily lower stratum". Sexuality is the only topic of discussion here, yet actual sex is regarded as affrontery. Job interviews are conducted in hotel rooms which lack beds. Nothing: That thing about which everything can be said without fear of censure, since even the most outrageous statements about it will still come to naught. Romanticism: A term ingeniously devised by literary historians to describe a movement composed of writers and artists who, if they were alive today, would immediately and without hesitation dissociate themselves from each other. ************************************************************************ Send your submissions to: chintz@epas.utoronto.ca Or send with a SASE to: The Editors, The Devil's Dictionary of Literary Terms 252 Westmoreland Avenue Toronto, Ontario Canada M6H 3A4 You will be notified when our editorial decisions have been made. Feel free to forward this call for submissions to anyone who might be interested. Please do not change the text of this announcement. The Devil's Dictionary of Literary Terms (Copyright 1994 Warren Cariou and Carrie Hintz)