Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Antitheory and its Discontents
Jeffrey R. Di Leo, University of Houston-Victoria, USA
Part 1 Antitheory as Theory
1 Antitheory 2.0: The Case of Derrida and the Question of Literature
Jeffrey Nealon, Penn State University, USA
2 Crisis Theory after Crisis
Peter Hitchcock, CUNY Graduate Center and Baruch College of the City University of New York, USA
3 Epic Fail: Prolegomenon to Failing Again, Finally
Irving Goh, National University of Singapore, Singapore
4 Antitheory, Positivism, and Critical Pedagogy
Kenneth J. Saltman, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, USA
5 Down with Theory!: Reflections on the Ends of Antitheory
Jeffrey R. Di Leo
Part 2 Reading as Antitheory
6 Critique Unlimited
Robert T. Tally Jr., Texas State University, USA
7 How Not to be Governed Like That: Theory Steams On
Robin Truth Goodman, Florida State University, USA
8 Antitheory in Postcolonial Perspective
Nicole Simek, Whitman College, USA
9 Eaten Alive, or, Why the Death of Theory is not Antitheory
Christian Haines, Pennsylvania State University, USA
10 Theory as Meatgrinder
Harold Aram Veeser, City College of New York (English Department) and the CUNY Graduate Center (Middle East and Middle-Eastern American Center), USA
Part 3 Philosophy, Theory, and Antitheory
11 Theory Does Not Exist
Paul Allen Miller, University of South Carolina, USA
12 (Anti)Theory's Resistances
Tom Eyers, Duquesne University, USA
13 Forget Latour
Zahi Zalloua, Whitman College, USA
14 After Anti-foundationalism: Ten Theses on the Limits of Antitheory
Christopher Breu, Illinois State University, USA
Index