The Comic Turn in Contemporary English Fiction: Who’s Laughing Now?
Autor Dr Huw Marshen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 feb 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350249387
ISBN-10: 1350249386
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350249386
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Offers new interventions in some of the most pressing critical debates in contemporary literary studies, including discussions of the politics, ethics, affect and aesthetics of contemporary fiction.
Notă biografică
Huw Marsh is Lecturer in Twentieth and Twenty-First Century Literature at Queen Mary University of London, UK. He is the author of Beryl Bainbridge (2014) and works mainly on post-war and contemporary fiction.
Cuprins
AcknowledgementsIntroduction: A comic turn in contemporary English fiction?The comic turnContemporary English fictionWho's laughing now?1. 'Sinking giggling into the sea'?: Jonathan Coe and the politics of comedyJokes and/as innovative actionFrom satire to comedyMetacomedy2. 'A grave disquisition': Style, class and comedy in the novels of Martin AmisThe ethics of styleHigh and low: Hierarchies of comic styleComedy, class and style from The Information to Lionel Asbo3. 'Talking about things we didn't want to talk about': Zadie Smith and laughterWhat's so hysterical about hysterical realism?Mixed emotions: Laughter and tears'Talking about things we didn't want to talk about': Comedy and community4. 'Like a monkey with a miniature cymbal': Magnus Mills and the comedy of repetitionComedy, surprise and repetitionMagnus MillsDeadpan; dead bodies: The Restraint of BeastsWorking to rule, ruling the workplace: The Scheme for Full Employment and The Maintenance of HeadwayFunny as hell: Beckett, O'Brien, Mills5. 'Simple high jinks'?: Nicola Barker and the comedy of paradoxPooterism, pedantry and the logic of the absurd: Incongruity as comic practice'Is the fucking carnival in town or what?': Satire, the grotesque and the carnivalesqueLaughter and redemption: From comedy to humourRabbit-duck/Duck-rabbit6. 'No drawing of lines': Howard Jacobson and the boundaries of the comicLancing the boil: Zoo Time, Coming from Behind and the necessity of offence'Jew know why'?: The Finkler Question, Jewish Jokes and the politics of joke-telling communities'Not only funny': Kalooki Nights and Holocaust comedyComedy Trumped? Pussy and the challenge for contemporary satireConclusion: The comic turn in contemporary English fictionSelling the past as the future: Nationhood, work and performance in Julian Barnes's England, EnglandBibliography
Recenzii
Quietly brilliant ... as a work that is at once tightly focused on contemporary literature and truly cross-disciplinary in its approach, it will be an essential read both for students and researchers of contemporary literature and for a wider pool of comedy scholars.
[A] detailed and compelling showcase for analysing modern literature as comedy.
Insightful ... Marsh's sole authorship offers the perspective of only one critic, yet The Comic Turn in Contemporary English Fiction unpacks numerous aspects of contemporary comic writing, one in each chapter.
This valuable 2020 book neatly brings us up to date (pre-covid) and makes the case that 'comedy offers a new vocabulary for thinking about contemporary English fiction' (210) drawing on the frameworks of other disciplines, not least comedy studies.
Alongside the subtle and thoughtful insights about the centrality of comedy to literary meaning, there is much to be learned here about how that comedy illuminates contemporary issues, such as national identity, class, and the nature of work. And indeed, one of the delights of the book is a renewed sense of fiction's gifts for elucidating such issues.
We laugh in many ways and for different reasons, and we often laugh when reading contemporary British fiction-but why? Obviously, we need a new definition of English humor. Marsh provides it by elaborating a comprehensive theory of laughter that comes alive thanks to astute close readings illuminating the comic turn in British fiction. He offers all at once an encyclopedia of comedy and witty surveys of Martin Amis, Nicola Baker, Jonathan Coe, Magnus Mills, Howard Jacobson and Zadie Smith. This eminently teachable book is bound to become a classic of humor studies.
This serious work on comedy should be read by everyone with an interest in contemporary English fiction. In clear and intelligent prose, Huw Marsh's insightful book engages with major and, in some cases, critically underappreciated authors to offer new ideas about the comic and a new shape to the field.
[A] detailed and compelling showcase for analysing modern literature as comedy.
Insightful ... Marsh's sole authorship offers the perspective of only one critic, yet The Comic Turn in Contemporary English Fiction unpacks numerous aspects of contemporary comic writing, one in each chapter.
This valuable 2020 book neatly brings us up to date (pre-covid) and makes the case that 'comedy offers a new vocabulary for thinking about contemporary English fiction' (210) drawing on the frameworks of other disciplines, not least comedy studies.
Alongside the subtle and thoughtful insights about the centrality of comedy to literary meaning, there is much to be learned here about how that comedy illuminates contemporary issues, such as national identity, class, and the nature of work. And indeed, one of the delights of the book is a renewed sense of fiction's gifts for elucidating such issues.
We laugh in many ways and for different reasons, and we often laugh when reading contemporary British fiction-but why? Obviously, we need a new definition of English humor. Marsh provides it by elaborating a comprehensive theory of laughter that comes alive thanks to astute close readings illuminating the comic turn in British fiction. He offers all at once an encyclopedia of comedy and witty surveys of Martin Amis, Nicola Baker, Jonathan Coe, Magnus Mills, Howard Jacobson and Zadie Smith. This eminently teachable book is bound to become a classic of humor studies.
This serious work on comedy should be read by everyone with an interest in contemporary English fiction. In clear and intelligent prose, Huw Marsh's insightful book engages with major and, in some cases, critically underappreciated authors to offer new ideas about the comic and a new shape to the field.