Contemporary Drift: Genre, Historicism, and the Problem of the Present

Author:   Theodore Martin
Publisher:   Columbia University Press
ISBN:  

9780231181938


Pages:   264
Publication Date:   16 July 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Contemporary Drift: Genre, Historicism, and the Problem of the Present


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Author:   Theodore Martin
Publisher:   Columbia University Press
Imprint:   Columbia University Press
ISBN:  

9780231181938


ISBN 10:   0231181930
Pages:   264
Publication Date:   16 July 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

Why are some of the most predictable genres still very much around? Why does the present moment feel different and yet seem impossible to comprehend? Theodore Martin makes significant headway toward answering the second question by addressing the first, or why there now appears to be a resurgence of popular genres. His enviably simple critical apparatus offers a concise theory of our moment in cultural history. This exceptional book makes the present crisis of critical theory both intelligible and fun.--Nancy Armstrong, Duke University This exceptionally fluid and well-constructed study asks how fictional narratives address contemporaneity. Boldly contesting the literary critical taste for historicism, Martin turns toward genre analysis, arguing that each of the genres he investigates exhibits a distinctive form of temporal 'drift' or 'drag.' The resulting discussions explore both novels and films; they are beautifully written and certain to be important for any scholar interested in carefully thinking through the problems posed by genre and narrative temporality more generally. Strongly recommended.--Caren Irr, Brandeis University Martin's work here is impressive indeed, offering a very useful orientation towards the whole question of genre fiction's relationship with literary production and scholarship.--Eric Sandberg, City University of Hong Kong Orbit: A Journal of American Literature A strong and thoughtful contribution to criticism, to the ways we conceptualize and ponder our own times through literature and film.--Choice Elegantly written and clearly argued.--KULT Contemporary Drift is a terrifically successful 'experiment in too-close reading, ' not just because it offers smart, ethnically grounded, and beautifully written interpretations of recent fiction and films. It is also a successful experiment because it is ongoing: it acknowledges all that we cannot yet know about our present moment, but demands that we keep trying anyway.--ALH Contemporary Drift is a stunning study that brings expert close-reading skills and theoretical acumen to bear on the question of how works of art do not simply exist in, but actively reflect upon, the experience of being contemporary. Martin's book moves effortlessly between general reflections on the nature of literature and film and a more specific account of the contemporary moment, and between literature and the various nonliterary frameworks with which it engages. Thoroughly researched, well argued, and engagingly written, Contemporary Drift will become a standard reference for scholars interested in the study of contemporary literature.--Andrew Hoberek, University of Missouri Through a series of brilliant readings of revived and emergent genres--westerns, noir, postapocalyptic fiction--which invent ways of thinking about temporalities directly shaped by the dynamics of advanced capitalism, Martin works against the one-sidedness of recent debates to show how form and history inform one another in contemporary fiction. Revealing how aesthetic objects can become a resource for reimagining historicism in a present rendered simultaneously more encompassing and more elusive than ever, Contemporary Drift is a must-read for those who study the culture of the present and the aesthetics of capitalism.--Sianne Ngai, Stanford University


Why are some of the most predictable genres still very much around? Why does the present moment feel different and yet seem impossible to comprehend? Theodore Martin makes significant headway toward answering the second question by addressing the first, or why there now appears to be a resurgence of popular genres. His enviably simple critical apparatus offers a concise theory of our moment in cultural history. This exceptional book makes the present crisis of critical theory both intelligible and fun.--Nancy Armstrong, Duke University This exceptionally fluid and well-constructed study asks how fictional narratives address contemporaneity. Boldly contesting the literary critical taste for historicism, Martin turns toward genre analysis, arguing that each of the genres he investigates exhibits a distinctive form of temporal 'drift' or 'drag.' The resulting discussions explore both novels and films; they are beautifully written and certain to be important for any scholar interested in carefully thinking through the problems posed by genre and narrative temporality more generally. Strongly recommended.--Caren Irr, Brandeis University A strong and thoughtful contribution to criticism, to the ways we conceptualize and ponder our own times through literature and film.--Choice Martin's work here is impressive indeed, offering a very useful orientation towards the whole question of genre fiction's relationship with literary production and scholarship.--Eric Sandberg, City University of Hong Kong Orbit: A Journal of American Literature Elegantly written and clearly argued.--KULT Contemporary Drift is a terrifically successful 'experiment in too-close reading, ' not just because it offers smart, ethnically grounded, and beautifully written interpretations of recent fiction and films. It is also a successful experiment because it is ongoing: it acknowledges all that we cannot yet know about our present moment, but demands that we keep trying anyway.--ALH Contemporary Drift is a stunning study that brings expert close-reading skills and theoretical acumen to bear on the question of how works of art do not simply exist in, but actively reflect upon, the experience of being contemporary. Martin's book moves effortlessly between general reflections on the nature of literature and film and a more specific account of the contemporary moment, and between literature and the various nonliterary frameworks with which it engages. Thoroughly researched, well argued, and engagingly written, Contemporary Drift will become a standard reference for scholars interested in the study of contemporary literature.--Andrew Hoberek, University of Missouri Through a series of brilliant readings of revived and emergent genres--westerns, noir, postapocalyptic fiction--which invent ways of thinking about temporalities directly shaped by the dynamics of advanced capitalism, Martin works against the one-sidedness of recent debates to show how form and history inform one another in contemporary fiction. Revealing how aesthetic objects can become a resource for reimagining historicism in a present rendered simultaneously more encompassing and more elusive than ever, Contemporary Drift is a must-read for those who study the culture of the present and the aesthetics of capitalism.--Sianne Ngai, Stanford University


Why are some of the most predictable genres still very much around? Why does the present moment feel different and yet seem impossible to comprehend? Theodore Martin makes significant headway toward answering the second question by addressing the first, or why there now appears to be a resurgence of popular genres. His enviably simple critical apparatus offers a concise theory of our moment in cultural history. This exceptional book makes the present crisis of critical theory both intelligible and fun.--Nancy Armstrong, Duke University This exceptionally fluid and well-constructed study asks how fictional narratives address contemporaneity. Boldly contesting the literary critical taste for historicism, Martin turns toward genre analysis, arguing that each of the genres he investigates exhibits a distinctive form of temporal 'drift' or 'drag.' The resulting discussions explore both novels and films; they are beautifully written and certain to be important for any scholar interested in carefully thinking through the problems posed by genre and narrative temporality more generally. Strongly recommended.--Caren Irr, Brandeis University Martin's work here is impressive indeed, offering a very useful orientation towards the whole question of genre fiction's relationship with literary production and scholarship.--Eric Sandberg, City University of Hong Kong Orbit: A Journal of American Literature A strong and thoughtful contribution to criticism, to the ways we conceptualize and ponder our own times through literature and film.--Choice Elegantly written and clearly argued.--KULT Contemporary Drift is a terrifically successful 'experiment in too-close reading, ' not just because it offers smart, ethically grounded, and beautifully written interpretations of recent fiction and films. It is also a successful experiment because it is ongoing: it acknowledges all that we cannot yet know about our present moment, but demands that we keep trying anyway.--ALH Contemporary Drift is a stunning study that brings expert close-reading skills and theoretical acumen to bear on the question of how works of art do not simply exist in, but actively reflect upon, the experience of being contemporary. Martin's book moves effortlessly between general reflections on the nature of literature and film and a more specific account of the contemporary moment, and between literature and the various nonliterary frameworks with which it engages. Thoroughly researched, well argued, and engagingly written, Contemporary Drift will become a standard reference for scholars interested in the study of contemporary literature.--Andrew Hoberek, University of Missouri Through a series of brilliant readings of revived and emergent genres--westerns, noir, postapocalyptic fiction--which invent ways of thinking about temporalities directly shaped by the dynamics of advanced capitalism, Martin works against the one-sidedness of recent debates to show how form and history inform one another in contemporary fiction. Revealing how aesthetic objects can become a resource for reimagining historicism in a present rendered simultaneously more encompassing and more elusive than ever, Contemporary Drift is a must-read for those who study the culture of the present and the aesthetics of capitalism.--Sianne Ngai, Stanford University


Author Information

Theodore Martin is associate professor of English at the University of California, Irvine.

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