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Outside, America: The Temporal Turn in Contemporary American Fiction

Autor Dr. Hikaru Fujii
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 oct 2014
The idea of the "outside" as a space of freedom has always been central in the literature of the United States. This concept still remains active in contemporary American fiction; however, its function is being significantly changed. Outside, America argues that, among contemporary American novelists, a shift of focus to the temporal dimension is taking place. No longer a spatial movement, the quest for the outside now seeks to reach the idea of time as a force of difference, a la Deleuze, by which the current subjectivity is transformed. In other words, the concept is taking a "temporal turn."  Discussing eight novelists, including Don DeLillo, Richard Powers, Paul Theroux, and Annie Proulx, each of whose works describe forces of given identities-masculine identity, historical temporality, and power, etc.-which block quests for the outside, Fujii shows how the outside in these texts ceases to be a spatial idea. With due attention to critical and social contexts, the book aims to reveal a profound shift in contemporary American fiction.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781628925364
ISBN-10: 1628925361
Pagini: 160
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 9 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Caracteristici

Explores the importance of the temporal dimension of narrative and its social and critical implications

Notă biografică

Hikaru Fujii is Assistant Professor of English Department at Doshisha University, Japan.

Cuprins

Introduction: America and Outside / Part I: Space of Outside / 1. Dear American Road: The End of the Road in Annie Proulx's Postcards and Richard Powers's Operation Wandering Soul / 2. Where the Tides Rise and Ebb: Power and "America" in Steve Erickson's Rubicon Beach / 3. Journey to the End of the Father: Battlefield of Masculinity in Paul Theroux's The Mosquito Coast / 4. The American Traveler's Love And Solitude: The Pragmatics of the Double in William T. Vollmann's The Atlas / Part II: Practices of Outside / 5. Nietzsche, Crime Fiction, and Question of Masculinity in Denis Johnson's Already Dead: A California Gothic / 6. A Man with a Green Memory: Cinema, War and Freedom in Stephen Wright's Meditations in Green / 7. Time and Again: The Outside and the Narrative Pragmatics in The Body Artist / 8. WWDD (What Would Disney Do)?: Cinematic Field and Narrative Act in Richard Powers's Prisoner's Dilemma / Chapter 9: Writing from a Different "Now": Question of Ahistorical Time in Contemporary Los Angeles Fiction / Conclusion: The Temporal Turn in American Fiction / Bibliography / Index

Recenzii

When the questing American hero, having lit out for the territories, runs out of space and discovers that there is no 'outside,' nothing exterior to the road-movie that is contemporary America-what happens then? Time changes; the self mutates; and the novel approaches a threshold between the literary mode of postmodernism and whatever lies ahead. This is what Hiraku Fujii tells us through his series of brilliant and revelatory readings of American novels since the late '80s. Not for the first time, it has taken an outsider to show Americans where to look and what to look for in their own imaginative literature. These novels-by Don DeLillo, Richard Powers, William Vollmann, Steve Erickson, Annie Proulx and others-will never look the same again.
Hikaru Fujii's Outside, America The Temporal Turn in Contemporary American Fiction is judicious, informed, perspicacious, and eye-opening. Meriting attention from both academics and the larger community of readers who value and appreciate illuminating criticism, it is a valuable contribution to our understanding of contemporary American fiction's achievements and prospects.
A lively and gracefully written piece of work that pokes holes in the walls of Fortress America by examining an A-list of recent American writers and their works. Fujii shows that, only when those walls are transformed into membranes, and mutation becomes possible, can the recovery of individual freedoms be achieved.