![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments
With increasing frequency, readers of literature are encountering barely intelligible, sometimes unrecognizable languages created by combining one or more languages with English. Evelyn Ch'ien argues that weird English constitutes the new language of literature, implicitly launching a new literary theory. "Weird English" explores experimental and unorthodox uses of English by multilingual writers traveling from the canonical works of Nabokov and Hong Kingston to the less critiqued linguistic terrain of Junot Diaz and Arundhati Roy. It examines the syntactic and grammatical innovations of these authors, who use English to convey their ambivalence toward or enthusiasm for English or their political motivations for altering its rules. Ch'ien looks at how the collision of other languages with English invigorated and propelled the evolution of language in the twentieth century and beyond. Ch'ien defines the allure and tactical features of a new writerly genre, even as she herself writes with a sassiness and verve that communicates her ideas with great panache.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
Gold Experience B1+ Students' Book with…
Carolyn Barraclough, Megan Roderick, …
Undefined
R1,410
Discovery Miles 14 100
Persistent Organic Chemicals in the…
Bommanna G. Loganathan, Jong Seong Khim, …
Hardcover
R5,142
Discovery Miles 51 420
X-Kit Presteer Essensiele Verwysings…
M Peacock, R. Scheepers, …
Paperback
![]() R202 Discovery Miles 2 020
How to Build a Digital Library
Ian H. Witten, David Bainbridge, …
Paperback
R1,764
Discovery Miles 17 640
Mastering Primary Languages
Paula Ambrossi, Darnelle Constant-Shepherd
Hardcover
R3,042
Discovery Miles 30 420
|