Ihab Habib Hassan (Arabic: إيهاب حبيب حسن; October 17, 1925 – September 10, 2015) was an Egypt-born American literary theorist and writer.[1][2] He was known for popularizing the concept of postmodernism in literary studies with his influential 1971 book, The Dismemberment of Orpheus: Toward a Postmodern Literature.[1]
Ihab Hassan | |
---|---|
Born | Cairo, Kingdom of Egypt | October 17, 1925
Died | September 10, 2015 Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. | (aged 89)
Biography
editIhab Hassan was born in Cairo, Egypt, and emigrated to the United States in 1946. He was Emeritus Vilas Research Professor at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. His writings include influential books such as The Dismemberment of Orpheus: Toward a Postmodern Literature (1971, 1982), Paracriticisms: Seven Speculations of the Times (1975), and The Postmodern Turn: Essays in Postmodern Theory and Culture (1987). In his later years, he published a number of short stories in various literary magazines. Before his death he completed The Changeling and Other Stories. He also wrote more than 300 essays and reviews on literary and cultural subjects, and delivered over 500 public lectures in North America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. [citation needed]
Modernism and postmodernism
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2012) |
In The Dismemberment of Orpheus, Hassan set out the differences between modernism and postmodernism.
Modernism | Postmodernism |
---|---|
Romanticism/Symbolism | Pataphysics/Dadaism |
Form (conjunctive, closed) | Antiform (disjunctive, open) |
Purpose | Play |
Design | Chance |
Hierarchy | Anarchy |
Mastery/Logos | Exhaustion/Silence |
Art Object / Finished Work | Process/Performance/Happening |
Distance | Participation |
Creation/Totalization | Decreation/Deconstruction |
Synthesis | Antithesis |
Presence | Absence |
Centering | Dispersal |
Genre/Boundary | Text/Intertext |
Semantics | Rhetoric |
Paradigm | Syntagm |
Hypotaxis | Parataxis |
Metaphor | Metonymy |
Selection | Combination |
Root/Depth | Rhizome/Surface |
Interpretation/Reading | Against Interpretation / Misreading |
Signified | Signifier |
Lisible (Readerly) | Scriptible (Writerly) |
Narrative / Grande Histoire | Anti-narrative / Petite Histoire |
Master Code | Idiolect |
Symptom | Desire |
Type | Mutant |
Genital/Phallic | Polymorphous/Androgynous |
Paranoia | Schizophrenia |
Origin / Cause | Difference-Differance / Trace |
God the Father | The Holy Ghost |
Metaphysics | Irony |
Determinacy | Indeterminacy |
Transcendence | Immanence |
Hassan's "Table of Differences between Modernism and Postmodernism" ends with the statement: "Yet the dichotomies this table represents remain insecure, equivocal. For differences shift, defer, even collapse; concepts in any one vertical column are not all equivalent; and inversions and exceptions, in both modernism and postmodernism, abound."[3]
Works
editHassan's written works include:
- Radical Innocence: Studies in the Contemporary American Novel (1961)
- The Literature of Silence: Henry Miller and Samuel Beckett (1967)
- The Dismemberment of Orpheus: Toward a Postmodern Literature (1971, 1982)
- Paracriticisms: Seven Speculations of the Times (1975)
- The Right Promethean Fire: Imagination, Science, and Cultural Change (1980)
- Out of Egypt: Scenes and Arguments of an Autobiography (1985)
- The Postmodern Turn: Essays in Postmodern Theory and Culture (1987)
- Selves at Risk: Patterns of Quest in Contemporary American Letters (1990)
- Rumors of Change: Essays of Five Decades (1995)
- Between the Eagle and the Sun: Traces of Japan (1996)
- In Quest of Nothing: Selected Essays, 1998-2008 (2010)
Academic achievements
edit- Guggenheim Fellowship (1958, 1962)
- Faculty of the School of Letters, Indiana University (1964)
- Faculty of the Salzburg Summer Seminars in American Studies (1965,1975)
- Senior Fulbright Lectureships (1966, 1974, 1975)
- Visiting Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (1972)
- Senior Fellow at the Camargo Foundation in Cassis (1974–1975)
- Resident Scholar at the Rockefeller Study Center in Bellagio (1978)
- Senior Fellow at the Humanities Research Center in Canberra (1990, 2003)
- Resident Fellow at the Humanities Research Institute of the University of California, Irvine (1990)
- Faculty of the Stuttgart Summer Seminars in Cultural Studies (1991)
- Honorary degree: Faculty of Humanities at Uppsala University, Sweden[4] (1996)
- Honorary degree: University of Giessen (1999)
- Faculty of the Scandinavian Summer School of Literary Theory and Criticism in Karlskrona (2000, 2001, 2004).
Hassan also received Alumni Teaching Award and the Honors Program Teaching Award at the University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, where he taught for 29 years.[citation needed]
References
edit- ^ a b "Hassan coined term postmodernism for change in '60s literature". Milwaukee Wisconsin Journal Sentinel. 14 September 2015. Archived from the original on 16 September 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
- ^ "Guide to the Ihab Hassan Papers". Online Archive of California. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
- ^ Hassan, Ihab Habib (1982). The dismemberment of Orpheus: toward a postmodern literature (2nd ed.). Madison, Wis: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 269. ISBN 978-0-299-09120-0.
- ^ "Honorary doctorates - Uppsala University, Sweden". 9 June 2023.
External links
editArchival collections
edit- Guide to the Ihab Hassan Papers. Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California.