Tag: Fiction

Rewriting the North Contemporary British Fiction and the Cultural Politics of Devolution


Free Download Chloe Ashbridge, "Rewriting the North: Contemporary British Fiction and the Cultural Politics of Devolution "
English | ISBN: 1032436603 | 2023 | 180 pages | EPUB, PDF | 883 KB + 10 MB
This book shows how twenty-first-century writing about Northern England imagines alternative democratic futures for the region and the English nation, signalling the growing awareness of England as a distinct and variegated political formation. In 2016, the Brexit vote intensified ongoing constitutional tensions throughout the UK, which have been developing since the devolution of Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland in 1997. At the same time, British devolution developed a distinctively cultural registration as a surrogate for parliamentary representation and an attempt to disrupt the status of London as Britain’s cultural epicentre.

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Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction The Ventriloquists


Free Download Kim Chul, "Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction: The Ventriloquists "
English | ISBN: 1498565700 | 2020 | 150 pages | EPUB | 1045 KB
Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction is a compilation of thirteen original essays which was first serialized in a quarterly issued by the National Institute of Korean Language, Saekukŏsaenghwal (Living our National Language Anew) in a column entitled, "Our Fiction, Our Language" between 2004 to 2007. Although the original intent of the Institute was to elucidate on important features particular to "national fiction" and the superiority of "national language," instead Kim Chul’s astute essays offers a completely different reading of how national literature and language was constructed. Through a series of culturally nuanced readings, Kim links the formation and origins of Korean language and fiction to modernity and traces its origins to the Japanese colonial period while demonstrating in a very lucid way how colonialism constitutes modernity and how all modernity is perforce colonial, given the imperial crucibles from which modernist claims emerged. For Kim, denying this reality can only lead to violent distortions as he eschews appeals to a preexisting framework, preferring instead to ground his theoretical insights in subtle, innovative readings of texts themselves.

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Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction The Ventriloquists


Free Download Kim Chul, "Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction: The Ventriloquists "
English | ISBN: 1498565700 | 2020 | 150 pages | EPUB | 1045 KB
Reading Colonial Korea through Fiction is a compilation of thirteen original essays which was first serialized in a quarterly issued by the National Institute of Korean Language, Saekukŏsaenghwal (Living our National Language Anew) in a column entitled, "Our Fiction, Our Language" between 2004 to 2007. Although the original intent of the Institute was to elucidate on important features particular to "national fiction" and the superiority of "national language," instead Kim Chul’s astute essays offers a completely different reading of how national literature and language was constructed. Through a series of culturally nuanced readings, Kim links the formation and origins of Korean language and fiction to modernity and traces its origins to the Japanese colonial period while demonstrating in a very lucid way how colonialism constitutes modernity and how all modernity is perforce colonial, given the imperial crucibles from which modernist claims emerged. For Kim, denying this reality can only lead to violent distortions as he eschews appeals to a preexisting framework, preferring instead to ground his theoretical insights in subtle, innovative readings of texts themselves.

(more…)

Politics and Affect in Black Women’s Fiction


Free Download Kathy Glass, "Politics and Affect in Black Women’s Fiction "
English | ISBN: 1498538398 | 2017 | 134 pages | EPUB | 2 MB
Exploring literary possibilities, Politics and Affect reads black women’s text-in particular Frances Harper’s "The Two Offers" (1859), Julia Collins’s The Curse of Caste (1865), Nella Larsen’s Quicksand (1928), and Danzy Senna’s Caucasia (1998)-as richly creative documents saturated with sociopolitical value. Interested in how African American women writers from the nineteenth century to the present have mined the politics of affect and emotion to document love, shame, and suffering in environments shaped by race, Kathy Glass gives sustained attention to the impact of racist affect on the black body, and examines how black women writers deploy emotional states to engender sociopolitical change.

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Hope and Kinship in Contemporary Fiction Moods and Modes of Temporality and Belonging


Free Download Gero Bauer, "Hope and Kinship in Contemporary Fiction: Moods and Modes of Temporality and Belonging"
English |ASIN : B0C3631KPH | 2024 | 272 pages | EPUB, PDF | 740 KB + 3 MB
Explores the emphasis that contemporary novels, films and television series place on the present, arguing that hope emerges from the potentiality of the here and now, rather than the future, and as intimately entangled with negotiations of structures of belonging.

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Girls’ Series Fiction and American Popular Culture


Free Download LuElla D’Amico, "Girls’ Series Fiction and American Popular Culture "
English | ISBN: 1498517625 | 2016 | 318 pages | EPUB | 823 KB
Girls’ Series Fiction and American Popular Culture examines the ways in which young female heroines in American series fiction have undergone dramatic changes in the past 150 years, changes which have both reflected and modeled standards of behavior for America’s tweens and teen girls. Though series books are often derided for lacking in imagination and literary potency, that the majority of American girls have been exposed to girls’ series in some form, whether through books, television, or other media, suggests that this genre needs to be studied further and that the development of the heroines that girls read about have created an impact that is worthy of a fresh critical lens. Thus, this collection explores how series books have influenced and shaped popular American culture and, in doing so, girls’ everyday experiences from the mid nineteenth century until now. The collection interrogates the cultural work that is performed through the series genre, contemplating the messages these books relay about subjects including race, class, gender, education, family, romance, and friendship, and it examines the trajectory of girl fiction within such contexts as material culture, geopolitics, socioeconomics, and feminism.

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Fiction and the Sixth Mass Extinction Narrative in an Era of Loss


Free Download Jonathan Elmore, "Fiction and the Sixth Mass Extinction: Narrative in an Era of Loss "
English | ISBN: 1793619190 | 2020 | 178 pages | EPUB | 2 MB
Fiction and the Sixth Mass Extinction is one of the first works to focus specifically on fiction’s engagements with human driven extinction. Drawing together a diverse group of scholars and approaches, this volume pairs established voices in the field with emerging scholars and traditionally recognized climate fiction (‘cli-fi’) with texts and media typically not associated with Anthropocene fictions. The result is a volume that both engages with and furthers existing work on Anthropocene fiction as well as laying groundwork for the budding subfield of extinction fiction. This volume takes up the collective insistence on the centrality of story to extinction studies. In various and disparate ways, each chapter engages with the stories we tell about extinction, about the extinction of animal and plant life, and about the extinction of human life itself. Answering the call to action of extinction studies, these chapters explore what kinds of humanity caused this event and what kinds may live through it; what cultural assumptions and values led to this event and which ones could lead out of it; what relationships between human life and this planet allowed the sixth mass extinction and what alternative relationships could be possible.

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Ethnic Worlds in Select Indian Fiction


Free Download Juri Dutta, "Ethnic Worlds in Select Indian Fiction"
English | ISBN: 8132118464 | 2014 | 165 pages | EPUB | 445 KB
The book is the first of its kind in using the methodology of Comparative Literature to look at ethnographic fiction written in different regional languages of India.

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Empty Names, Fiction and the Puzzles of Non-Existence


Free Download Anthony Everett, Thomas Hofweber, "Empty Names, Fiction and the Puzzles of Non-Existence"
English | 2000 | ISBN: 1575862530 | PDF | pages: 172 | 8.1 mb
Philosophers and theorists have long been puzzled by humans’ ability to talk about things that do not exist, or to talk about things that they think exist but, in fact, do not. Empty Names, Fiction, and the Puzzles of Non-Existence is a collection of 13 new works concerning the semantic and metaphysical issues arising from empty names, non-existence, and the nature of fiction. The contributors include some of the most important researchers working in these fields. Some of the papers develop and defend new positions on these matters, while others offer important new perspectives and criticisms of the existing approaches. The volume contains a comprehensive introductory essay by the editors, which provides a survey of the philosophical issues concerning empty names, the various responses to these issues, and the literature on the subject to date.

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Big Fiction How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature


Free Download Dan Sinykin, "Big Fiction: How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature "
English | ISBN: 0231192959 | 2023 | 328 pages | PDF | 2 MB
In the late 1950s, Random House editor Jason Epstein would talk jazz with Ralph Ellison or chat with Andy Warhol while pouring drinks in his office. By the 1970s, editors were poring over profit-and-loss statements. The electronics company RCA bought Random House in 1965, and then other large corporations purchased other formerly independent publishers. As multinational conglomerates consolidated the industry, the business of literature―and literature itself―transformed.

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