"J. Hillis Miller's Black Holes and Manuel Asensi's J. Hillis Miller; or, Boustrophedonic Reading are texts which occupy the same volume on facing pages, a format which aptly stages the way their book both offers readings, and reflects on the practice of reading. . . . Materialist analysis is essential to [Miller's] project, and it is here that he distinguishes his readings from much work undertaken in 'cultural studies'. . . ."—?