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OverviewThe Poetics of Genre in the Contemporary Novel investigates the role of genre in the contemporary novel: taking its departure from the observation that numerous contemporary novelists make use of popular genre influences in what are still widely considered to be literary novels, it sketches the uses, the work, and the value of genre. It suggests the value of a critical look at texts’ genre use for an analysis of the contemporary moment. From this, it develops a broader perspective, suggesting the value of genre criticism and taking into view traditional genres such as the bildungsroman and the metafictional novel as well as the kinds of amalgamated forms which have recently come to prominence. In essays discussing a wide range of authors from Steven Hall to Bret Easton Ellis to Colson Whitehead, the contributors to the volume develop their own readings of genre’s work and valence in the contemporary novel. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Tim Lanzendörfer, Johannes Gutenberg UniverPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 15.10cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 21.80cm Weight: 0.458kg ISBN: 9781498517300ISBN 10: 1498517307 Pages: 310 Publication Date: 15 August 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Introduction: The Generic Turn? Toward a Poetics of Genre in the Contemporary Novel. Part One. Genre at the End of Postmodernism 1 Aliens in America: Toni Morrison, Steven Spielberg, and the Ends of Postmodernism Philipp Löffler 2 The Digital Intensification of Postmodern Poetics Lai-Tze Fan 3 The Black Box of Genre in Colson Whitehead’s The Intuitionist and Charles Yu’s How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe Stephen Hock 4 Self-Parody and the Aesthetics of Literary Transgression in John Hawkes’s An Irish Eye and Thomas Pynchon’s Inherent Vice Salwa Karoui-Elounelli 5 Sincerity, Sharing, and Authorial Discourses on the Fiction/Nonfiction Distinction: The Case of Dave Eggers’s You Shall Know Our Velocity Virginia Pignagnoli Part Two. High and Low, Literary and Popular 6 Techno-Anxiety and the Middlebrow: Science-Fictionalization in the Fictional Mainstream of the Early Twenty-First Century Roger Bellin 7 Post-Apocalypse Now—Cormac McCarthy's The Road as Post-Apocalyptic Science Fiction Yonatan Englender and Elana Gomel 8 Ghostly Presences: Nostalgia, the Literary Market, and the Cultural Work of Genre in Stephen King’s Joyland Clemens Spahr 9 Postmodern Autonomy and the Poetics of Genre in Matt Ruff’s Novels Annette Schimmelpfennig and Tim Lanzendörfer 10 Purposing the Familiar: Genre, Repetition, and Anxiety in Breat Easton Ellis’s Lunar Park Gavin F. Hurley Part Three. Revisiting Traditional Genre(s) 11 The Heirs of Don Quixote: Representations of the World-Shaping Powers of Genre in Contemporary Fiction Martina Allen 12 Reimagining Genre in the Contemporary Immigrant Novel. Katie Daily-Bruckner 13 Looking Beneath the Surface: Self and Genre in Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland Tim De Jong 14 Connecting Travel Writing, Bildungsroman, and Therapeutic Culture in Dave Eggers’s Literature Robert Mousseau Bibliography About the Contributors IndexReviews"Both contributor and editor, Lanzendörfer has compiled an impressive variety of essays dealing with genre in the postmodern age and beyond. The issue is not a new one, and in fact it reinvents itself in virtually every generation. Nonetheless, few collections address the interactions and functions of so-called artistic fiction and 'lowbrow' entertainment as aggressively and productively as do the contributors to this collection. Investigating the liminal area between popular and 'literary' work has always been hazardous, and this book makes it even more so in that it ventures into narrative forms outside the novel itself, especially film and television. Scholars from the US, Germany, Israel, Canada, Italy, and Tunisia, all with impressive critical credentials, handle the challenge with skill and international heft. Divided into three sections, 'Genre at the End of Postmodernism,' 'Between High and Low, Literary and Popular,' and 'Revisiting Traditional Genre,' the 14 essays evaluate works as diverse as Saving Private Ryan, Cormac McCarthy's apocalyptic The Road, and Steven King's Joyland. The range of critical perspectives is inclusive and far-reaching. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. * CHOICE * We are in the midst of a genre turn—in the words of Lev Grossman, contemporary writers of literary fiction have been ""frantically borrowing"" from popular genres. The Poetics of Genre in the Contemporary Novel helps make sense of this trend, weighing the claims of genre skeptics and genre champions, and arguing for the centrality of genre to the way we understand the literary production of the present moment. The essays in this collection assay a wide range of writers and approaches to genre, but as a group they make a convincing case for the importance of genre to contemporary literary fiction, and for the importance of genre-thinking to contemporary criticism. -- Samuel Cohen, University of Missouri Lanzendörfer’s collection is thus concerned with delineating the multiple roles genre plays today, and the essays it contains make a valuable contribution to our understanding of a central feature of much contemporary fiction. . . . . Read together, then, Martin and Lanzendörfer’s books offer a compelling picture of a cultural world in which genre is coming to play an ever more significant role, a cultural world which may well be remembered, for good and ill, as an age of genre. Martin writes [in Contemporary Drift: Genre, Historicism, and the Problem of the Present] that “the best way to understand the repetitions of late capitalism may be through the mechanisms of genre” (182). It would be difficult to make a stronger claim than this for the importance of these two books. * Orbit * The collection offers a timely international perspective on genre in the contemporary period. Uniting a diverse range of critics, it provides unique insights into the texts under discussion and engages readers fully in the evolving and problematic boundaries that both define and challenge our understandings of genre today. -- Katy Shaw, Leeds Beckett University We are in the midst of a genre turn—in the words of Lev Grossman, contemporary writers of literary fiction have been ""frantically borrowing"" from popular genres. The Poetics of Genre in the Contemporary Novel helps make sense of this trend, weighing the claims of genre skeptics and genre champions, and arguing for the centrality of genre to the way we understand the literary production of the present moment. The essays in this collection assay a wide range of writers and approaches to genre, but as a group they make a convincing case for the importance of genre to contemporary literary fiction, and for the importance of genre-thinking to contemporary criticism. -- Samuel Cohen, University of Missouri The collection offers a timely international perspective on genre in the contemporary period. Uniting a diverse range of critics, it provides unique insights into the texts under discussion and engages readers fully in the evolving and problematic boundaries that both define and challenge our understandings of genre today. -- Katy Shaw, Leeds Beckett University" Both contributor and editor, Lanzendorfer has compiled an impressive variety of essays dealing with genre in the postmodern age and beyond. The issue is not a new one, and in fact it reinvents itself in virtually every generation. Nonetheless, few collections address the interactions and functions of so-called artistic fiction and 'lowbrow' entertainment as aggressively and productively as do the contributors to this collection. Investigating the liminal area between popular and 'literary' work has always been hazardous, and this book makes it even more so in that it ventures into narrative forms outside the novel itself, especially film and television. Scholars from the US, Germany, Israel, Canada, Italy, and Tunisia, all with impressive critical credentials, handle the challenge with skill and international heft. Divided into three sections, 'Genre at the End of Postmodernism,' 'Between High and Low, Literary and Popular,' and 'Revisiting Traditional Genre,' the 14 essays evaluate works as diverse as Saving Private Ryan, Cormac McCarthy's apocalyptic The Road, and Steven King's Joyland. The range of critical perspectives is inclusive and far-reaching. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. * CHOICE * We are in the midst of a genre turn-in the words of Lev Grossman, contemporary writers of literary fiction have been frantically borrowing from popular genres. The Poetics of Genre in the Contemporary Novel helps make sense of this trend, weighing the claims of genre skeptics and genre champions, and arguing for the centrality of genre to the way we understand the literary production of the present moment. The essays in this collection assay a wide range of writers and approaches to genre, but as a group they make a convincing case for the importance of genre to contemporary literary fiction, and for the importance of genre-thinking to contemporary criticism. -- Samuel Cohen, University of Missouri The collection offers a timely international perspective on genre in the contemporary period. Uniting a diverse range of critics, it provides unique insights into the texts under discussion and engages readers fully in the evolving and problematic boundaries that both define and challenge our understandings of genre today. -- Katy Shaw, Leeds Beckett University We are in the midst of a genre turn--in the words of Lev Grossman, contemporary writers of literary fiction have been frantically borrowing from popular genres. The Poetics of Genre in the Contemporary Novel helps make sense of this trend, weighing the claims of genre skeptics and genre champions, and arguing for the centrality of genre to the way we understand the literary production of the present moment. The essays in this collection assay a wide range of writers and approaches to genre, but as a group they make a convincing case for the importance of genre to contemporary literary fiction, and for the importance of genre-thinking to contemporary criticism.--Samuel Cohen, University of Missouri The collection offers a timely international perspective on genre in the contemporary period. Uniting a diverse range of critics, it provides unique insights into the texts under discussion and engages readers fully in the evolving and problematic boundaries that both define and challenge our understandings of genre today.--Katy Shaw, Leeds Beckett University Author InformationTim Lanzendörfer is assistant professor of American studies at the University of Mainz. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |