Terry Pratchett's Ethical Worlds: Essays on Identity and Narrative in Discworld and Beyond

Terry Pratchett's writing celebrates the possibilities opened up by inventiveness and imagination. It constructs an ethical stance that values informed and self-aware choices, knowledge of the world in which one makes those choices, the importance of play and humor in crafting a compassionate worldview, and acts of continuous self-examination and creation.

This collection of essays uses inventiveness and creation as a thematic core to combine normally disparate themes, such as science fiction studies, the effect of collaborative writing and shared authorship, steampunk aesthetics, productive modes of "ownership," intertextuality, neomedievalism and colonialism, adaptations into other media, linguistics and rhetorics, and coming of age as an act of free will.

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Terry Pratchett's Ethical Worlds: Essays on Identity and Narrative in Discworld and Beyond

Terry Pratchett's writing celebrates the possibilities opened up by inventiveness and imagination. It constructs an ethical stance that values informed and self-aware choices, knowledge of the world in which one makes those choices, the importance of play and humor in crafting a compassionate worldview, and acts of continuous self-examination and creation.

This collection of essays uses inventiveness and creation as a thematic core to combine normally disparate themes, such as science fiction studies, the effect of collaborative writing and shared authorship, steampunk aesthetics, productive modes of "ownership," intertextuality, neomedievalism and colonialism, adaptations into other media, linguistics and rhetorics, and coming of age as an act of free will.

19.49 In Stock
Terry Pratchett's Ethical Worlds: Essays on Identity and Narrative in Discworld and Beyond

Terry Pratchett's Ethical Worlds: Essays on Identity and Narrative in Discworld and Beyond

Terry Pratchett's Ethical Worlds: Essays on Identity and Narrative in Discworld and Beyond

Terry Pratchett's Ethical Worlds: Essays on Identity and Narrative in Discworld and Beyond

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Overview

Terry Pratchett's writing celebrates the possibilities opened up by inventiveness and imagination. It constructs an ethical stance that values informed and self-aware choices, knowledge of the world in which one makes those choices, the importance of play and humor in crafting a compassionate worldview, and acts of continuous self-examination and creation.

This collection of essays uses inventiveness and creation as a thematic core to combine normally disparate themes, such as science fiction studies, the effect of collaborative writing and shared authorship, steampunk aesthetics, productive modes of "ownership," intertextuality, neomedievalism and colonialism, adaptations into other media, linguistics and rhetorics, and coming of age as an act of free will.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781476638034
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers
Publication date: 08/05/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 155
File size: 4 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Kristin Noone is an English instructor and writing center faculty at Irvine Valley College in Southern California; her research interests include medievalism and adaptation, heterotemporalities, superheroes, fantasy and the fantastic, and popular romance, and she has published on topics from ethics in the work of Terry Pratchett to the symbolism of Dean Winchester’s pie in Supernatural. Emily Lavin Leverett is a professor of English at Methodist University in Fayetteville North Carolina. With her primary focus as Medieval English Romance—tales of adventure, magic, chivalry, faith, and fantasy, she also studies medievalism, the ways that the romances of medieval Britain have made their way into contemporary arts, specifically English author Terry Pratchett’s Discworld novels.
Kristin Noone is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California, Riverside; her dissertation links medieval romance, fantasy fiction, and popular culture studies. She publishes academic articles on fantasy and medievalism as well as short fantasy fiction.
Emily Lavin Leverett is a professor of English at Methodist University in Fayetteville North Carolina. With her primary focus as Medieval English Romance--tales of adventure, magic, chivalry, faith, and fantasy, she also studies medievalism, the ways that the romances of medieval Britain have made their way into contemporary arts, specifically English author Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Introduction: Terry Pratchett’s Ethical Worlds
Kristin Noone and Emily Lavin Leverett
Something That Gods Are: Acts of Creation in Terry Pratchett’s Early Science Fiction
Kristin Noone
Conan the Nonagenarian: Beyond Hyborian Hypermasculinity with Terry Pratchett’s Cohen the Barbarian
Mike Perschon
Carrot Ironfoundersson: Medieval Romance, Narrative Causality and the Ethics of Choice in Terry Pratchett’s Guards! Guards!
Emily Lavin Leverett
Self-Discovery, Free Will and Change: The Ethics of Growing Up in the Fantasy Novels of Terry Pratchett
Kathleen Burt
The ­Anglo-Saxon Ælf: Old English Influences in Terry Pratchett’s The Wee Free Men and The Shepherd’s Crown
Livia Bongiovanni
Constructing Identity Through Language in Discworld
Elise A. Bell
Rhetoricity of Discworld: Magic and the Ethics of Footnotes
Amy Lea Clemons
The Golempunk Manifesto: Ownership of the Means of Production in Pratchett’s Discworld
Janet Brennan Croft
Neomedievalism and the Ethics of Colonization in Pratchett and Baxter’s The Long Earth and The Long
Sadie E. Hash
Appendix: Works and Adaptations
About the Contributors
Index
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