American Literature in Transition, 1990–2000
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:28th Dec '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book explores the dynamics of literary change in the 1990s for American literature.
The book is for scholars and students of contemporary American literature who want to think beyond the narrower scope of the single-author or single-theoretical-perspective study to get a richer sense of a key decade's literary activity.Written in the shadow of the approaching millennium, American literature in the 1990s was beset by bleak announcements of the end of books, the end of postmodernism, and even the end of literature. Yet, as conservative critics marked the century's twilight hours by launching elegies for the conventional canon, American writers proved the continuing vitality of their literature by reinvigorating inherited forms, by adopting and adapting emerging technologies to narrative ends, and by finding new voices that had remained outside that canon for too long. By reading 1990s literature in a sequence of shifting contexts - from independent presses to the AIDS crisis, and from angelology to virtual reality - American Literature in Transition, 1990–2000 provides the fullest map yet of the changing shape of a rich and diverse decade's literary production. It offers new perspectives on the period's well-known landmarks, Toni Morrison, Thomas Pynchon, David Foster Wallace, but also overdue recognition to writers such as Ana Castillo, Evan Dara, Steve Erickson, and Carole Maso.
ISBN: 9781107136014
Dimensions: 235mm x 158mm x 24mm
Weight: 760g
396 pages