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Encountering Pennywise - Critical Perspectives on Stephen King's IT (Hardcover)
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Encountering Pennywise - Critical Perspectives on Stephen King's IT (Hardcover)
Series: Horror and Monstrosity Studies Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Contributions by Amylou Ahava, Jeff Ambrose, Fernando Gabriel
Pagnoni Berns, Daniel P. Compora, Penny Crofts, Keith Currie, Erin
Giannini, Diganta Roy, Hannah Lina Schneeberger, Shannon S. Shaw,
Maria Wiegel, and Margaret J. Yankovich First published in 1986,
Stephen King's novel IT forever changed the legacy of the literary
clown. The subject of a TV miniseries and a two-part film
adaptation and the inspiration for a resurgence of the evil clown
figure in popular culture, IT's influence is undeniable, yet
scholarship to date is almost exclusively devoted to the
adaptations rather than the novel itself. Encountering Pennywise:
Critical Perspectives on Stephen King's "IT" considers the
pronounced cultural fluctuations of IT's legacies by centering the
novel within the theoretical frameworks that animate it and ensure
its literary and cultural persistence. The collection explores the
ways the novel, so like its antagonist, replicates (or disavows)
the icons of various canons and categories in order to accomplish
specific psychological and cultural work. Gathering the work of
scholars from diverse professional and disciplinary vantage points,
editor Whitney S. May has curated an anthology that spans
discussions of American surveillance culture, intergenerational
conflict, the legacies of settler colonialism and Native American
representation, serial-killer fanaticism, and more. In this volume,
we read the protagonists' constellations of countermoves against
Pennywise as productive outlines of critique effectuated by the
richness of the clown's reflective power. The essays are therefore
thematically arranged into a series of four categories of
"counter"-countercurrents, countercultures, counterclaims, and
counterfeits-where each supplies a specific critical lens through
which to view Pennywise's disruptions of both culture and cultural
critique.
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