Contemporary American Literature and Excremental Culture

Contemporary American Literature and Excremental Culture
Title Contemporary American Literature and Excremental Culture PDF eBook
Author Mary C. Foltz
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 277
Release 2020-10-08
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 3030465306

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Contemporary American Literature and Excremental Culture: American Sh*t analyzes post-1960 scatological novels that utilize representations of human waste to address pressing issues, including pollution of waterways, environmental racism, and militarism. Primarily examining postmodern parody, the book shows the value of aesthetic renderings of sanitary engineering for composting ideologies that fuel a ruinous impact on the world. Drawing on late twentieth-century psychoanalytic thinkers Norman O. Brown, Frantz Fanon, and Leo Bersani, American Sh*t shows the continued relevance of psychoanalytic interpretations of contemporary fiction for understanding post-45 authors’ engagement with waste. Ultimately, the monograph reveals how novelists Ishmael Reed, Jonathan Franzen, Gloria Naylor, Don DeLillo, and Samuel R. Delany critique subjects who abnegate their status as waste-producing beings and bring readers back to embrace Winner of the 2019 Northeast Modern Language Association Book Award for Literary Criticism of English Language Literature

An Ethics of Waste

An Ethics of Waste
Title An Ethics of Waste PDF eBook
Author Mary Foltz
Publisher
Pages 203
Release 2009
Genre
ISBN

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In our contemporary moment of environmental crisis, contemporary authors follow environmental activists in their focus on the effluent produced by our national body, calling our attention to the multiple wastes of so-called civilization. Although critics of contemporary literature, like Fredric Jameson and Linda Hutcheon, claim that the creative thinkers of our time refuse to engage with a radical ethic, my dissertation entitled "An Ethics of Waste: Twentieth-Century American Literature and Excremental Culture" argues that many current literary texts encourage the reader to avoid participation in the ecological disaster by finding value in the excreta of both the individual and national body. Instead of flushing waste to the margins, they show that by examining the detritus of our economic system and finding new uses for material previously deemed worthless, we will birth a sustainable nation and a less destructive world. Rather than imagine a utopian paradise, they create fictional communities and individuals who find pleasure in all that might appear worthless to the market. Their excremental ethics illustrate that the continuation of human life lies not in the discovery of a new Eden, but in allying ourselves with our excreta and refusing to imagine a separation between the organic world and ourselves.

Trauma and Motherhood in Contemporary Literature and Culture

Trauma and Motherhood in Contemporary Literature and Culture
Title Trauma and Motherhood in Contemporary Literature and Culture PDF eBook
Author Laura Lazzari
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 246
Release 2021-11-30
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 3030774074

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Trauma and Motherhood in Contemporary Literature and Culture repositions motherhood studies through the lens of trauma theory by exploring new challenges surrounding conception, pregnancy, and postpartum experiences. Chapters investigate nine case studies of motherhood trauma and recovery in literature and culture from the last twenty years by exploring their emotional consequences through the lens of trauma, resilience, and “working through” theories. Contributions engage with a transnational corpus drawn from the five continents and span topics as rarely discussed as pregnancy denial, surrogacy, voluntary or involuntary childlessness, racism and motherhood, carceral mothering practices, surrogacy, IVF, artificial wombs, and mothering through war, genocide, and migration. Accompanied by an online creative supplement, this volume deals with silenced aspects of embodied motherhood while enhancing a better understanding of the cathartic effects of storytelling.

Bearing the Bad News

Bearing the Bad News
Title Bearing the Bad News PDF eBook
Author Sanford Pinsker
Publisher University of Iowa Press
Pages 208
Release 1990
Genre Literary Collections
ISBN 9781587291906

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Critic and poet Pinsker offers 11 essays exploring such topics as the decline of formative reading, unifying themes in American literature, the cultural value of humor (but not vice versa), and the place of the college novel. No bibliography or index. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

The Palgrave Handbook of Reproductive Justice and Literature

The Palgrave Handbook of Reproductive Justice and Literature
Title The Palgrave Handbook of Reproductive Justice and Literature PDF eBook
Author Beth Widmaier Capo
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 662
Release 2022-09-10
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 3030995305

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This handbook offers a collection of scholarly essays that analyze questions of reproductive justice throughout its cultural representation in global literature and film. It offers analysis of specific texts carefully situated in their evolving historical, economic, and cultural contexts. Reproductive justice is taken beyond the American setting in which the theory and movement began; chapters apply concepts to international realities and literatures from different countries and cultures by covering diverse genres of cultural production, including film, television, YouTube documentaries, drama, short story, novel, memoir, and self-help literature. Each chapter analyzes texts from within the framework of reproductive justice in an interdisciplinary way, including English, Japanese, Italian, Spanish, and German language, literature and culture, comparative literature, film, South Asian fiction, Canadian theatre, writing, gender studies, Deaf studies, disability studies, global health and medical humanities, and sociology. Academics, graduate students and advanced undergraduate students in Literature, Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies, Cultural Studies, Motherhood Studies, Comparative Literature, History, Sociology, the Medical Humanities, Reproductive Justice, and Human Rights are the main audience of the volume.

“All-Electric” Narratives

“All-Electric” Narratives
Title “All-Electric” Narratives PDF eBook
Author Rachele Dini
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Pages 377
Release 2021-10-07
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1501367374

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Winner of the 2023 Emily Toth Award for Best Single Work in Women's Studies “All-Electric” Narratives is the first in-depth study of time-saving electrical appliances in American literature. It examines the literary depiction of refrigerators, vacuum cleaners, oven ranges, washing machines, dryers, dishwashers, toasters, blenders, standing and hand-held mixers, and microwave ovens between 1945, when the “all-electric” home came to be associated with the nation's hard-won victory, and 2020, as contemporary writers consider the enduring material and spiritual effects of these objects in the 21st century. The appropriation and subversion of the rhetoric of domestic electrification and time-saving comprises a crucial, but overlooked, element in 20th-century literary forms and genres including Beat literature, Black American literature, second-wave feminist fiction, science fiction, and postmodernist fiction. Through close-readings of dozens of literary texts alongside print and television ads from this period, Dini shows how U.S. writers have unearthed the paradoxes inherent to claims of appliances' capacity to “give back” time to their user, transport them into a technologically-progressive future, or “return” them to some pastoral past. In so doing, she reveals literary appliances' role in raising questions about gender norms and sexuality, racial exclusion and erasure, class anxieties, the ramifications of mechanization, the perils and possibilities of conformity, the limitations of patriotism, and the inevitable fallacy of utopian thinking-while both shaping and radically disrupting the literary forms in which they operated.

Hatred of Sex

Hatred of Sex
Title Hatred of Sex PDF eBook
Author Oliver Davis
Publisher U of Nebraska Press
Pages 196
Release 2022-04
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1496231759

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Hatred of Sex links Jacques Rancière’s political philosophy of the constitutive disorder of democracy with Jean Laplanche’s identification of a fundamental perturbation at the heart of human sexuality. Sex is hated as well as desired, Oliver Davis and Tim Dean contend, because sexual intensity impedes coherent selfhood and undermines identity, rendering us all a little more deplorable than we might wish. Davis and Dean explore the consequences of this conflicted dynamic across a range of fields and institutions, including queer studies, attachment theory, the #MeToo movement, and “traumatology,” demonstrating how hatred of sex has been optimized and exploited by neoliberalism. Advancing strong claims about sex, pleasure, power, intersectionality, therapy, and governance, Davis and Dean shed new light on enduring questions of equality at a historical moment when democracy appears ever more precarious.