Buch, Englisch, 408 Seiten, Format (B × H): 158 mm x 230 mm, Gewicht: 712 g
The Novel and the Politics of Form
Buch, Englisch, 408 Seiten, Format (B × H): 158 mm x 230 mm, Gewicht: 712 g
ISBN: 978-1-009-31429-9
Verlag: Cambridge University Press
The Possibility of Literature is an essential collection from one of the most powerful and distinctive voices in contemporary literary studies. Bringing together key compositions from the last twenty-five years, as well as several new pieces, the book demonstrates the changing fate of literary thinking over the first decades of the twenty-first century. Peter Boxall traces here the profound shifts in the global conditions that make literature possible as these have occurred in the historical passage from 9/11 to Covid 19. Exploring questions such as 'The Idea of Beauty', the nature of 'Mere Being', or the possibilities of Rereading, the author anatomises the myriad forces that shape the literary imagination. At the same time, he gives vivid critical expression to the imaginative possibilities of literature itself – those unique forms of communal life that literature makes possible in a dramatically changing world, and that lead us towards a new shared future.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction: the possibility of literature; Part I. On Writers: 1. A sort of crutch: race and prosthesis in Herman Melville's fiction; 2. Samuel Beckett: towards a political reading; 3. A leap out of our biology: history, tautology and biomatter in DeLillo's later fiction; 4. A more sophisticated imitation: Ishiguro and the novel; 5. A cleaving in the mind: Kelman's later novels; 6. Zadie Smith, E. M. Forster and the idea of beauty; Part II. On Literary History: 7. The threshold of vision: the animal gaze in Beckett, Sebald and Coetzee; 8. The anatomy of realism: Cervantes, Coetzee and artificial life; 9. Back roads: Edgeworth. Bowen. Yeats. Beckett; 10. Blind seeing: death writing from Dickinson to the contemporary; 11. Mere being: imagination at the end of the mind; Part III. On the Contemporary: 12. Imagining the future in the British novel; 13. Shallow intensity: Neoliberalism and the novel; 14. To carry now away: happy days in the anthropocene; 15. On rereading Proust.