Contemporary Novelists and the Aesthetics of Twenty-First Century American Life gives us a new way to view contemporary art novels, asking the key question: How do contemporary writers imagine aesthetic experience? Examining the works of some of the most popular names in contemporary fiction and art criticism, including Zadie Smith, Teju Cole, Siri Hustvedt, Ben Lerner, Rachel Kushner, and others, Alexandra Kingston-Reese finds that contemporary art novels are seeking to reconcile the negative feelings of contemporary life through a concerted critical realignment in understanding artistic sensibility, literary form, and the function of the aesthetic. Kingston-Reese reveals how contemporary writers refract and problematize aesthetic experience, illuminating an uneasiness with failure: firstly, about the failure of aesthetic experiences to solve and save; and secondly, the literary inability to articulate the emotional dissonance caused by aesthetic experiences now.
Thus , the study of the contemporary novel is dominated by books that name a new genre of novel — the crisis novel , the cosmopolitan ... Schoene , The Cosmopolitan Novel ; Vermeulen , Contemporary Literature and the End of the Novel .
These works ultimately reveal a shared goal of expanding the borders of belonging in ethnic and cultural groups, and thus add to the ever-evolving conversations surrounding both multicultural literature and self-care.
... Plotlines: Data Surveillance in Twenty- First- Century Literature by Katherine D. Johnston Art Essays: A Collection edited by Alexandra Kingston- Reese Contemporary Novelists and the Aesthetics of Twenty- First Century American Life ...
In this, the first book-length study of Cooper's life and work, Diarmuid Hester shows that such comparisons hardly scratch the surface.
... and Future of Creative Writing in the University edited by Loren Glass Hope Isn't Stupid: Utopian Affects in Contemporary American Literature by Sean Austin Grattan It's Just the Normal Noises: Marcus, Guralnick, No Depression, ...
Clarke begins the foreword of 2001 by noting that there are a hundred billion suns in the Milky Way—enough stars to represent every human who has ever lived. He continues: “every one of those stars is a sun, often far more brilliant and ...
A Critical Introduction Peter Boxall. revolutions that come with the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. At the heart of this moment in Faulkner is the tension between two modes of transport, and between two time signatures.
This book explores the ways in which a range of recent American novelists have handled the genre of the 'coming-of-age' novel, or the Bildungsroman.
A discussion of Kelman's 1984 novel The Busconductor Hines by the Warwick Research Collective (WReC) presents a compelling alternative reading of Kelman's oeuvre, one that attempts to preserve the chronotopic principle of “commentary” ...
Includes biographies, bibliographies and critical essays on a wide range of contemporary writers.