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'[I] wonder how we have managed without such a text.' -Rita Raley,
UCSB, USA Globalization has had a huge impact on thinking across
the humanities, redefining the understanding of fields such as
communication, culture, politics, and literature. This
groundbreaking Reader is the first to chart significant moments in
the emergence of contemporary thinking about globalization and
explore their significance for and impact on literary studies. The
book's three sections look in turn at: an overview of globalization
theory and influential works in the field the impact of
globalization on literature and our understanding of the 'literary'
how issues in globalization can be used to read specific literary
texts. Containing essays by leading critics including Arjun
Appadurai, Jacques Derrida, Simon Gikandi, Ursula K. Heise, Graham
Huggan, Franco Moretti, Bruce Robbins and Anna Tsing, this volume
outlines the relationship between globalization and literature,
offering a key sourcebook for and introduction to an exciting,
emerging field.
This book is a major study of the presentation of work and workers
in contemporary novels from India, North America and the UK.
Drawing on lively recent theories about work, it shows how the
novel is a crucial form for helping us to understand what work
means in contemporary society. It tackles some of the most urgent
questions of contemporary life by examining the stories about work
that novels produce. Including detailed readings of authors such as
Douglas Coupland, David Foster Wallace, Joshua Ferris, Arivand
Adiga, Chetan Bhagat and Monica Ali it explores how the
presentation of fictional characters lays open the experience of
insecure and precarious existence in the contemporary era. This
study illustrates that novels provide an essential tool for
understanding what work is and how we feel when we do it.
The 'Insider Guides to Success in Academia' offers support and
practical advice to doctoral students and early-career researchers.
Covering the topics that really matter, but which often get
overlooked, this indispensable series provides practical and
realistic guidance to address many of the needs and challenges of
trying to operate, and remain, in academia. These neat pocket
guides fill specific and significant gaps in current literature.
Each book offers insider perspectives on the often implicit rules
of the game -- the things you need to know but usually aren't told
by institutional postgraduate support, researcher development
units, or supervisors -- and will address a practical topic that is
key to career progression. They are essential reading for doctoral
students, early-career researchers, supervisors, mentors, or anyone
looking to launch or maintain their career in academia. Accessible,
insightful and a must-have toolkit for all final year doctoral
students, the founders of the 'Thesis Boot Camp' intensive writing
programme show how to survive and thrive through the challenging
final year of writing and submitting a thesis. Drawing on an
understanding of the intellectual, professional, practical and
personal elements of the doctorate to help readers gain insight
into what it means to finish a PhD and how to get there, this book
covers the common challenges and ways to resolve them. It includes
advice on: Project management skills to plan, track, iterate and
report on the complex task of bringing a multi-year research
project to a successful close Personal effectiveness and self-care
to support students to thrive in body, mind and relationships,
including challenging supervisor relationships. The successful
'generative' writing processes which get writers into the zone and
producing thousands of words; and then provides the skills to
structure and polish those words to publishable quality. What it
means to survive a PhD and consider multiple possible futures.
Written for students in all disciplines, and relevant to university
systems around the world, this unique book expertly guides students
through the final 6-12 months of the thesis.
This book is a major study of the presentation of work and workers
in contemporary novels from India, North America and the UK.
Drawing on lively recent theories about work, it shows how the
novel is a crucial form for helping us to understand what work
means in contemporary society. It tackles some of the most urgent
questions of contemporary life by examining the stories about work
that novels produce. Including detailed readings of authors such as
Douglas Coupland, David Foster Wallace, Joshua Ferris, Arivand
Adiga, Chetan Bhagat and Monica Ali it explores how the
presentation of fictional characters lays open the experience of
insecure and precarious existence in the contemporary era. This
study illustrates that novels provide an essential tool for
understanding what work is and how we feel when we do it.
'[I] wonder how we have managed without such a text.' -Rita Raley,
UCSB, USA Globalization has had a huge impact on thinking across
the humanities, redefining the understanding of fields such as
communication, culture, politics, and literature. This
groundbreaking Reader is the first to chart significant moments in
the emergence of contemporary thinking about globalization and
explore their significance for and impact on literary studies. The
book's three sections look in turn at: an overview of globalization
theory and influential works in the field the impact of
globalization on literature and our understanding of the 'literary'
how issues in globalization can be used to read specific literary
texts. Containing essays by leading critics including Arjun
Appadurai, Jacques Derrida, Simon Gikandi, Ursula K. Heise, Graham
Huggan, Franco Moretti, Bruce Robbins and Anna Tsing, this volume
outlines the relationship between globalization and literature,
offering a key sourcebook for and introduction to an exciting,
emerging field.
Essays discussing the concept of globalisation as present in works
of art and literature. Like Freud's `civilisation', globalisation
is both cause and consequence of its own discontents, visible at
times only in the resistances it generates. Study of the phenomenon
has until recently been confined largely to economists and
political and social scientists. The present volume brings a range
of literary and cultural analyses to bear to demonstrate both its
actual time-depth and the all-encompassing nature of its influences
on culture and consciousness. The English language and English
literature have been major elements in its forging, underwriting
first British and then American cultural hegemony. Unlike most
readings of globalisation, these essays depict notan irresistible
juggernaut but a process that, in generating its own resistances,
opens up the possibility of an alternative world order founded not
on the inequities of power and capital, but on shared commitment to
a fragile planet and a common and universal culture. Ranging from
Homer to Michael Crichton, Shakespeare to Suleyman Al-Bassam, John
Donne to Les Murray, John Keats to Derek Walcott, Conrad, Gissing
and Edward Lear to V. S. Naipauland Salman Rushdie, and addressing,
among many others, writers as diverse as Paul Valery and Edouard
Glissant, Gertrude Stein and Wallace Stevens, George Orwell, Martha
Gellhorn and Storm Jameson, Eliot, Yeats and Auden, Seamus Heaney
and Paul Muldoon, these essays explore a remarkable range of
responses to the process of globalisation from earliest times to
the present day. Contributors: STAN SMITH, GRAHAM HOLDERNESS, BRYAN
LOUGHREY, JENNIFER BIRKETT, PHYLLIS LASSNER, SHARON OUDITT, TONY
SHARPE, EDWARD LARRISSY, MICHAEL MURPHY, LIAM CONNELL
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