â<i>The Speed Handbook</i> is a tour de force, a crash-course in speed and space. The effervescent prose and the quicksilver deployment of Enda Duffyâs scholarship are such that the book fairly vibrates with insight and cogency. As Duffy catalogs speed in its many indices and instances, most of the familiar genres and all of the modernist pieties we thought we knew are overturned. And the rubric of speed gives Duffy license to range over the domains of childrenâs literature or contemporary advertising or car races with the same lavish attention he gives to avant-garde art or modernist totems such as James Joyce. I am deeply impressed by this book and indebted to its energy, salience, and comprehensiveness.ââ<b>Jennifer Wicke</b>, University of Virginia
â<i>The Speed Handbook</i> is not just a dazzling book but a necessary one. There is nothing else like it. Enda Duffy insists on the political stakes of speed, persuasively connecting the emergence of speed as the âonly new pleasure invented by modernityâ with commodity fetishism, the sensorium, gender, âendocolonization,â âadrenaline aesthetics,â and social control. This superlative work will become required reading for scholars of modernism, historians of technology, materialist critics, and even egg-headed car lovers.ââ<b>Paul K. Saint-Amour</b>, author of <i>The Copywrights: Intellectual Property and the Literary Imagination</i>
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Enda Duffy is Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is the author of The Subaltern Ulysses.