Utopian Pasts and Futures in the Contemporary American Novel
Utopian Pasts and Futures in the Contemporary American Novel highlights the emergence of a literary mode, speculative historism, over the past two decades in U.S. literature. Discussing in depth novels by writers such as Ken Kalfus, Joyce Carol Oates, and Colson Whitehead, among others, it integrates questions of critical method, genre, form, and literary theory, all of which have some urgency today. Addressing itself to the question of how to read this mode through a form of utopian hermeneutics, this study explores the formal constitution, narrative choices, and place in the wider literary market of a mode that it believes to be constitutively important for understanding American literature’s struggle with the possibility of imagining hopeful futures.

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Utopian Pasts and Futures in the Contemporary American Novel
Utopian Pasts and Futures in the Contemporary American Novel highlights the emergence of a literary mode, speculative historism, over the past two decades in U.S. literature. Discussing in depth novels by writers such as Ken Kalfus, Joyce Carol Oates, and Colson Whitehead, among others, it integrates questions of critical method, genre, form, and literary theory, all of which have some urgency today. Addressing itself to the question of how to read this mode through a form of utopian hermeneutics, this study explores the formal constitution, narrative choices, and place in the wider literary market of a mode that it believes to be constitutively important for understanding American literature’s struggle with the possibility of imagining hopeful futures.

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Utopian Pasts and Futures in the Contemporary American Novel

Utopian Pasts and Futures in the Contemporary American Novel

by Tim Lanzendörfer
Utopian Pasts and Futures in the Contemporary American Novel

Utopian Pasts and Futures in the Contemporary American Novel

by Tim Lanzendörfer

Hardcover

$120.00 
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Overview

Utopian Pasts and Futures in the Contemporary American Novel highlights the emergence of a literary mode, speculative historism, over the past two decades in U.S. literature. Discussing in depth novels by writers such as Ken Kalfus, Joyce Carol Oates, and Colson Whitehead, among others, it integrates questions of critical method, genre, form, and literary theory, all of which have some urgency today. Addressing itself to the question of how to read this mode through a form of utopian hermeneutics, this study explores the formal constitution, narrative choices, and place in the wider literary market of a mode that it believes to be constitutively important for understanding American literature’s struggle with the possibility of imagining hopeful futures.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781399519144
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 12/06/2023
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.56(d)

About the Author

Tim Lanzendörfer is Heisenberg Research Associate Professor for Literary Theory, Literary Studies and Literary Studies Education at Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany. His previous publications include the monographs Books of the Dead: Reading the Zombie in Contemporary Literature (UP Mississippi, 2018) and The Professionalization of the American Magazine: Periodicals, Biography, and Nationalism in the Early Republic (Schöningh, 2013), which won the Research Society for American Periodicals Book Prize in 2015. Most recently, he has been the editor of the Routledge Companion to the British and North American Literary Magazine (Routledge 2021) and co-editor of The Novel as Network: Forms, Ideas, Commodities (with Corinna Norrick-Rühl, Palgrave Macmillan, 2020) and of Medial Afterlives of H.P. Lovecraft: Comic, Film, Podcast, TV, Games (Palgrave Macmillan, 2023).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction: Speculative Historism, Visible Historical Futures

  1. At the Edges of Realism: Ken Kalfus’s Equilateral
  2. The Prismatic Lens of Genre: Joyce Carol Oates’s The Accursed
  1. A Less Oblique Mode of Political Art: Chris Bachelder’s U.S.! and Jason Heller’s Taft 2012
  2. Escapism, Nostalgia, and Hope: Ernest Cline’s Ready Player One
  3. Marvellous Histories, Possible Futures: Junot Díaz’s The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
  4. Slavery and Speculation: Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad and Ben Winter’s Underground Airlines

Conclusion: Speculative Historism and Contemporary Hope

Bibliography

Index

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