“The Swedish philosopher and literary scholar Martin Hägglund has swiftly established himself at the center of some of today’s most lively intellectual debates… Dying for Time delivers a revolutionary reading of the ways in which modernist writers express elemental aspects of human existence. In the process, it disproves the idea that deconstruction―or, indeed, literary theory per se―is always off-puttingly arid and abstract. Hägglund’s approach is absolutely the opposite… This is a book that brings literature and theory into forceful collision with life’s underlying realities. The resulting insight is resolutely atheistic: neither art nor thought allows access to another world of timeless perfection. Instead, each is irreducibly interwoven with the world in which we live. Some say that literary theory is dead, out of fashion, a thing of the past. But Hägglund shows how it can and should go on living: in unflinching fidelity to how it feels to be human.”―David Winters, Los Angeles Review of Books
“What distinguishes this important book is that it allows us to understand these canonical modernist concerns [temporality, mourning, and desire] in a wholly new way… It is the true nature of temporal experience that we are returned to by Hägglund’s profound and brilliant book, a work of literary criticism as timely as it is untimely.”―Adam Kelly, Modernism/Modernity
“Dying for Time has the chance to become a minor classic…beyond the crises of the humanities it leads the desire of the writer and the reader back to its origin in a care for something whose value is only underlined by the withering of time.”―Klas Molde, Dagens Nyheter
“Tremendously fruitful… To the extent that literary criticism exists to return the reader to the text, to reveal how much richer and more complex it is than one’s memory of it or thesis about it, Hägglund succeeds admirably.”―Tim Langen, Russian Review
“This book takes a shot across the bow of literature, reexamining the great works of Proust, Woolf, and Nabokov. Martin Hägglund takes on other professors of literature in how they interpreted these great authors. He leaves no stone unturned and no major work untouched… Hägglund makes a convincing argument.”―Kevin Winter, San Francisco Book Review
“Dying for Time provides important readings of the works of Proust, Woolf, and Nabokov. Here again, Hägglund operates with the concept of ‘survival,’ a vantage point that allows him to tackle difficult and central issues in the corpus of these authors. He has original and compelling analyses.”―Jean-Michel Rabaté, Derrida Today
“Dying for Time has much higher goals than simply challenging the established, traditional reading of Proust, Woolf and Nabokov with respect to questions such as time, mortality, memory or trauma and achieves more than it promises at its inception… Apart from opening an innovative hermeneutical perspective on the works of Proust, Woolf and Nabokov―which could prove itself very fruitful for further and more in depth literary and philosophical analysis of the texts―Hägglund’s book successfully challenges the traditional understanding of time, finitude and temporal being and offers a sound solution to the paradoxical logic of desire. Although Hägglund’s work is to some extent indebted to Derrida’s thinking, the concept of chronolibido can nevertheless be seen as one of the book’s original contributions to the revisal of the traditional understanding of time and our relation to it and to our temporal finitude.”―Paul-Gabriel Sandu, Metapsychology
“A compelling rethinking of the link between time and desire coupled with singularly insightful readings of novels by Marcel Proust (À la recherche du temps perdu), Virginia Woolf (Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse), and Vladimir Nabokov (Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle). Both as theory (of desire) and as practice (of literary analysis), Dying for Time is an unqualified success.”―Robert S. Lehman, Theory and Event
“Eminently readable and engrossingly polemical.”―Marc Farrant, Times Literary Supplement
“Revolutionary… Dying for Time: Proust, Woolf, Nabokov ultimately convinces one of the validity of its author’s Derrida-influenced challenge, as Martin Hägglund carefully refutes prominent critics, as well as Freud and Lacan, and consistently proves the validity of his chronolibidinal reading of these texts. Not only do we see how deconstruction is put to a new advantage via Hägglund’s approach, but one is also moved by the elemental struggle to survive depicted in each of these three modernist writers.”―Helane Levine-Keating, Woolf Studies Annual