‘Displaying an enviable intimacy with French thought on the one hand (Deleuze, Foucault, Blanchot) and twentieth-century Iranian poetics on the other, the author manages to do something quite extraordinary: from a non-Western perspective, he radically calls into question the time and place of the ‘postmodern’. If ever there is a book to make names of modern Persian literature such as Akhavan, Nima, Shamlu and Hedayat as familiar as Bataille and Guattari, it will be this one.’
Ian Almond, Georgia State University, USA
‘To call this work a tour de force is accurate but also unfaithful to the very tone and flesh of Mohaghegh's arguments, which resist facile syntheses and idle submission to the idol of difference. He instead begins and remains with silence and productively dwells in its Continental and Middle-Eastern trenches...Rebuking univocity, each silence defies a border. Committed with these thinkers to resisting the bordered self and imperial lines of demarcation, through a careful, learned, and unique reading of these texts, Mohaghegh assembles a paradoxical poetic unison not across borders but to cross out the very notion of borders.’
Farhang Erfani, American University, USA