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Thomas Pynchon's fiction has been considered masculinist,
misogynist, phallocentric, and pornographic: its formal
experimentation, irony, and ambiguity have been taken both to
complicate such judgments and to be parts of the problem. To the
present day, deep critical divisions persist as to whether
Pynchon's representations of women are sexist, feminist, or
reflective of a more general misanthropy, whether his writing of
sex is boorishly pornographic or effectually transgressive, whether
queer identities are celebrated or mocked, and whether his
departures from realist convention express masculinist elitism or
critique the gendering of genre. Thomas Pynchon, Sex, and Gender
reframes these debates. As the first book-length investigation of
Pynchon's writing to put the topics of sex and gender at its core,
it moves beyond binary debates about whether to see Pynchon as
liberatory or conservative, instead examining how his preoccupation
with sex and gender conditions his fiction's whole worldview. The
essays it contains, which cumulatively address all of Pynchon's
novels from V. (1963) to Bleeding Edge (2013), investigate such
topics as the imbrication of gender and power, sexual abuse and the
writing of sex, the gendering of violence, and the shifting
representation of the family. Providing a wealth of new approaches
to the centrality of sex and gender in Pynchon's work, the
collection opens up new avenues for Pynchon studies as a whole.
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Faces (Paperback)
Marie Franco
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R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Thomas Pynchon's fiction has been considered masculinist,
misogynist, phallocentric, and pornographic: its formal
experimentation, irony, and ambiguity have been taken both to
complicate such judgments and to be parts of the problem. To the
present day, deep critical divisions persist as to whether
Pynchon's representations of women are sexist, feminist, or
reflective of a more general misanthropy, whether his writing of
sex is boorishly pornographic or effectually transgressive, whether
queer identities are celebrated or mocked, and whether his
departures from realist convention express masculinist elitism or
critique the gendering of genre. Thomas Pynchon, Sex, and Gender
reframes these debates. As the first book-length investigation of
Pynchon's writing to put the topics of sex and gender at its core,
it moves beyond binary debates about whether to see Pynchon as
liberatory or conservative, instead examining how his preoccupation
with sex and gender conditions his fiction's whole worldview. The
essays it contains, which cumulatively address all of Pynchon's
novels from V. (1963) to Bleeding Edge (2013), investigate such
topics as the imbrication of gender and power, sexual abuse and the
writing of sex, the gendering of violence, and the shifting
representation of the family. Providing a wealth of new approaches
to the centrality of sex and gender in Pynchon's work, the
collection opens up new avenues for Pynchon studies as a whole.
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