Reconfigurations of the Bildungsroman
Title | Reconfigurations of the Bildungsroman PDF eBook |
Author | Gonçalo Cholant |
Publisher | Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG |
Pages | 526 |
Release | 2022-06-21 |
Genre | Science |
ISBN | 3110752840 |
The present work deals with the representation of trauma and violence in coming-of-age stories written by African-American and Afro-Caribbean women authors in the United States. The kinds of violence explored in this work are related to the post-colonial condition the women protagonists experience, in which racism, sexism, classism, among other kinds of discrimination, are co-created in an intersectional experience of oppression. The titles analyzed in this work are: Lucy (1990), written by Jamaica Kincaid; Breath, Eyes, Memory (1994), written by Edwidge Danticat; Bone Black – Memories of Girlhood (1996), written by bell hooks; and God Help the Child (2015), written by Toni Morrison. The Bildungsroman genre serves as the form with which the authors are able to display the different forms of violence experienced during the the process of growing up female and black in the United States, and also in the Caribbean islands of Antigua and Haiti, in the cases of Kincaid and Danticat respectively. The coming-of-age stories written by women, and more specifically by African-American and Afro-Caribbean women, tend to showcase narratives in which the tensions between the protagonists' self-determination and the influence of social and cultural factors in their development opportunities are negotiated. The genre is adapted and subverted by the authors, deviating from its canonical European origins, becoming a site in which the authors are able to represent different kinds of violence, and the subsequent traumatic consequences caused by it.
Sciences of Modernism
Title | Sciences of Modernism PDF eBook |
Author | Paul Peppis |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 325 |
Release | 2014-02-28 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1107660084 |
Sciences of Modernism examines key points of contact between British literature and the human sciences of ethnography, sexology and psychology at the dawn of the twentieth century. The book is divided into sections that pair exemplary scientific texts from the period with literary ones, charting numerous collaborations and competitions occurring between science and early modernist literature. Paul Peppis investigates this exchange through close readings of literary works by Claude McKay, E. M. Forster, Mina Loy, Rebecca West and Wilfred Owen, alongside science books by Alfred Haddon, Havelock Ellis, Marie Stopes, Bernard Hart and William Brown. In so doing, Peppis shows how these competing disciplines participated in the formation and consolidation of modernism as a broad cultural movement across a range of critical discourses. His study will interest students and scholars of the history of science, literary modernism, and English literature more broadly.
Palgrave Advances in Virginia Woolf Studies
Title | Palgrave Advances in Virginia Woolf Studies PDF eBook |
Author | A. Snaith |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 321 |
Release | 2007-03-28 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0230206042 |
This book is an invaluable guide to the body of criticism on Virginia Woolf. It includes comprehensive and insightful chapters on different approaches to Woolf, including feminist, historicist, postcolonial and biographical. The essays provide concise summaries of the key works in the field as well as an engaging description of the approach itself.
Alternative Reconfigurations of Masculinity in the Poetry of Leopoldo Maria Panero, Eduardo Haro Ibars and Eduardo Hervás
Title | Alternative Reconfigurations of Masculinity in the Poetry of Leopoldo Maria Panero, Eduardo Haro Ibars and Eduardo Hervás PDF eBook |
Author | Alyssa Marie Holan |
Publisher | |
Pages | 632 |
Release | 2005 |
Genre | Masculinity in literature |
ISBN |
Re/configurations of the Self in the Early War Literature of Oōka Shoh̄ei and Umezaki Haruo
Title | Re/configurations of the Self in the Early War Literature of Oōka Shoh̄ei and Umezaki Haruo PDF eBook |
Author | Erik Robert Lofgren |
Publisher | |
Pages | 782 |
Release | 1998 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Landscapes of Realism
Title | Landscapes of Realism PDF eBook |
Author | Svend Erik Larsen |
Publisher | John Benjamins Publishing Company |
Pages | 798 |
Release | 2022-03-15 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9027257965 |
Few literary phenomena are as elusive and yet as persistent as realism. While it responds to the perennial impulse to use literature to reflect on experience, it also designates a specific set of literary and artistic practices that emerged in response to Western modernity. Landscapes of Realism is a two-volume collaborative interdisciplinary investigation of this vast territory, bringing together leading-edge new criticism on the realist paradigms that were first articulated in nineteenth-century Europe but have since gone on globally to transform the literary landscape. Tracing the manifold ways in which these paradigms are developed, discussed and contested across time, space, cultures and media, this second volume shows in its four core essays and twenty-four case studies four major pathways through the landscapes of realism: The psychological pathways focusing on emotion and memory, the referential pathways highlighting the role of materiality, the formal pathways demonstrating the dynamics of formal experiments, and the geographical pathways exploring the worlding of realism through the encounters between European and non-European languages from the nineteenth century to the present.This volume is part of a book set which can be ordered at a special discount:
Canis Modernis
Title | Canis Modernis PDF eBook |
Author | Karalyn Kendall-Morwick |
Publisher | Penn State Press |
Pages | 275 |
Release | 2020-12-22 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0271088389 |
Modernist literature might well be accused of going to the dogs. From the strays wandering the streets of Dublin in James Joyce’s Ulysses to the highbred canine subject of Virginia Woolf’s Flush, dogs populate a range of modernist texts. In many ways, the dog in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries became a potent symbol of the modern condition—facing, like the human species, the problem of adapting to modernizing forces that relentlessly outpaced it. Yet the dog in literary modernism does not function as a stand-in for the human. In this book, Karalyn Kendall-Morwick examines the human-dog relationship in modernist works by Virginia Woolf, Jack London, Albert Payson Terhune, J. R. Ackerley, and Samuel Beckett, among others. Drawing from the evolutionary theories of Charles Darwin and the scientific, literary, and philosophical work of Donna Haraway, Temple Grandin, and Carrie Rohman, she makes a case for the dog as a coevolutionary and coadapting partner of humans. As our coevolutionary partners, dogs destabilize the human: not the autonomous, self-transparent subject of Western humanism, the human is instead contingent, shaped by its material interactions with other species. By demonstrating how modernist representations of dogs ultimately mongrelize the human, this book reveals dogs’ status both as instigators of the crisis of the modern subject and as partners uniquely positioned to help humans adapt to the turbulent forces of modernization. Accessibly written and convincingly argued, this study shows how dogs challenge the autonomy of the human subject and the humanistic underpinnings of traditional literary forms. It will find favor with students and scholars of modernist literature and animal studies.