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Finding the Plot: Storytelling in Popular Fictions

Editat de Loic Artiaga, Diana Holmes, Jacques Migozzi
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 dec 2012
Brings together an international group of scholars whose work on popular fiction in the broadest sense - from 'pulp' to fictions that have enjoyed both mass readership and critical esteem - includes a focus on the nature, effects and specific pleasures of consuming stories.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781443842389
ISBN-10: 1443842389
Pagini: 345
Dimensiuni: 150 x 211 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Notă biografică

Diana Holmes is Professor of French at the University of Leeds. Her published work on women writers includes monographs on Colette, Rachilde, French Women Writers 1848-1994 and romance. She is also the co-author of a study of Truffaut's cinema, and co-edits the Manchester University press series French Film Directors. Her current research is on the poetics and practice of middlebrow fiction. Loic Artiaga is Assistant Professor at the University of Limoges, and Associate Researcher of the Centre d'histoire culturelle des societes contemporaines (Universite de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines). He is a member of the executive committee (Conseil d'Administration) of the LPCM (Association internationale des chercheurs en Litteratures Populaires et Cultures Mediatiques). His publications include Des Torrents de papier (Limoges, Pulim, coll. " Mediatextes ", 2007), and "James Bond: modes d'emploi (1965 - annees 1990)", in James Bond (2)007. Anatomie d'un mythe populaire edited by Francoise Hache-Bissette, Fabien Boully and Vincent Chenille (Paris: Belin, 2007). His forthcoming book on Fantomas is due out in 2013: Loic Artiaga and Matthieu Letourneux. Fantomas. Figure mythique (Paris: Autrement). Jacques Migozzi is Professor of French Literature at the University of Limoges, and President of the Association internationale des chercheurs en Litteratures Populaires et Culture Mediatique (LPCM). His more recent publications include Boulevards du populaire (Limoges, PULIM, coll. Mediatextes, 2005); two co-edited Special issues of journals: "Recits journalistiques et culture mediatique", A contrario n[degrees] 12, 2009, http://www2.unil.ch/acontrario and "Roman populaire et ideologie", Belphegor, Volume 9, n[degrees] 2, janvier /fevrier 2010, http://etc.dal.ca/belphegor/; "Storytelling: opium du peuple et / ou plaisirs du texte?" in the Special Issue of French Cultural Studies referred to above; and "Cet obscur objet du desir universitaire: coup d'oeil dans le retroviseur sur 15 ans de recherches sur les fictions populaires.", in Fictions populaires, edited by Nicolas Cremona, Bernard Gendrel and Patrick Moran (Classiques Garnier, 2011). David Platten is Professor of Modern French Studies at the University of Leeds. He has published on a wide range of modern French writers, including Michel Tournier, Philippe Djian, Jorge Semprun and Jules Verne. His most recent book, published by Rodopi in 2011, is entitled The Pleasures of Crime: Reading Modern French Crime Fiction. A scholar and fan of detective and crime fiction, he has recently produced studies of the literary thriller and of the links between the media and politics in the contemporary crime novel. He is currently working on two projects: one on the aesthetics of popular fiction and the other on cultural representations of sport and sporting figures in France.