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Literature has always recorded a history of patriarchy, sexual
violence, and resistance. Academics have been using literature to
expose and critique this violence and domination for half a
century. But the continued potency of #MeToo after its 2017
explosion adds new urgency and wider awareness about these issues,
while revealing new ways in which rape culture shapes our everyday
lives. This intersectional guide helps readers, students, teachers,
and scholars face and challenge our culture of sexual violence by
confronting it through the study of literature. #MeToo and Literary
Studies gathers essays on literature from Ovid to Carmen Maria
Machado, by academics working across the United States and around
the world, who offer clear ways of using our reading, teaching, and
critical practices to address rape culture and sexual violence. It
also examines the promise and limitations of the #MeToo movement
itself, speaking to the productive use of social media as well as
to the voices that the movement has so far muted. In uniting
diverse voices to enable the #MeToo movement to reshape literary
studies, this book is also committed to the idea that the way we
read and write about literature can make real change in the world.
Literature has never looked weirder--full of images, colors,
gadgets, and footnotes, and violating established norms of
character, plot, and narrative structure. Yet over the last 30
years, critics have coined more than 20 new "realisms" in their
attempts to describe it. What makes this decidedly unorthodox
literature "realistic"? And if it is, then what does "realism" mean
anymore? Examining literature by dozens of writers, and over a
century of theory and criticism about realism, The Moral Worlds of
Contemporary Realism sorts through the current critical confusion
to illustrate how our ideas about what is real and how best to
depict it have changed dramatically, especially in recent years.
Along the way, Mary K. Holland guides the reader on a lively tour
through the landscape of contemporary literary studies--taking in
metafiction, ideology, posthumanism, postmodernism, and
poststructuralism--with forays into quantum mechanics, new
materialism, and Buddhism as well, to give us entirely new ways of
viewing how humans use language to make sense of--and to make--the
world.
While critics collect around the question of what comes "after
postmodernism," this book asks something different about recent
American fiction: what if we are seeing not the end of
postmodernism but its belated success? Succeeding Postmodernism
examines how novels by DeLillo, Wallace, Danielewski, Foer and
others conceptualize threats to individuals and communities posed
by a poststructural culture of mediation and simulation, and
possible ways of resisting the disaffected solipsism bred by that
culture. Ultimately it finds that twenty-first century American
fiction sets aside the postmodern problem of how language does or
does not mean in order to raise the reassuringly retro question of
what it can and does mean: it finds that novels today offer
language as solution to the problem of language. Thus it suggests a
new way of reading "antihumanist" late postmodern fiction, and a
framework for understanding postmodern and twenty-first century
fiction as participating in a long and newly enlivened tradition of
humanism and realism in literature.
Literature has always recorded a history of patriarchy, sexual
violence, and resistance. Academics have been using literature to
expose and critique this violence and domination for half a
century. But the continued potency of #MeToo after its 2017
explosion adds new urgency and wider awareness about these issues,
while revealing new ways in which rape culture shapes our everyday
lives. This intersectional guide helps readers, students, teachers,
and scholars face and challenge our culture of sexual violence by
confronting it through the study of literature. #MeToo and Literary
Studies gathers essays on literature from Ovid to Carmen Maria
Machado, by academics working across the United States and around
the world, who offer clear ways of using our reading, teaching, and
critical practices to address rape culture and sexual violence. It
also examines the promise and limitations of the #MeToo movement
itself, speaking to the productive use of social media as well as
to the voices that the movement has so far muted. In uniting
diverse voices to enable the #MeToo movement to reshape literary
studies, this book is also committed to the idea that the way we
read and write about literature can make real change in the world.
While critics collect around the question of what comes "after
postmodernism," this book asks something different about recent
American fiction: what if we are seeing not the end of
postmodernism but its belated success? Succeeding Postmodernism
examines how novels by DeLillo, Wallace, Danielewski, Foer and
others conceptualize threats to individuals and communities posed
by a poststructural culture of mediation and simulation, and
possible ways of resisting the disaffected solipsism bred by that
culture. Ultimately it finds that twenty-first century American
fiction sets aside the postmodern problem of how language does or
does not mean in order to raise the reassuringly retro question of
what it can and does mean: it finds that novels today offer
language as solution to the problem of language. Thus it suggests a
new way of reading "antihumanist" late postmodern fiction, and a
framework for understanding postmodern and twenty-first century
fiction as participating in a long and newly enlivened tradition of
humanism and realism in literature.
Literature has never looked weirder--full of images, colors,
gadgets, and footnotes, and violating established norms of
character, plot, and narrative structure. Yet over the last 30
years, critics have coined more than 20 new "realisms" in their
attempts to describe it. What makes this decidedly unorthodox
literature "realistic"? And if it is, then what does "realism" mean
anymore? Examining literature by dozens of writers, and over a
century of theory and criticism about realism, The Moral Worlds of
Contemporary Realism sorts through the current critical confusion
to illustrate how our ideas about what is real and how best to
depict it have changed dramatically, especially in recent years.
Along the way, Mary K. Holland guides the reader on a lively tour
through the landscape of contemporary literary studies--taking in
metafiction, ideology, posthumanism, postmodernism, and
poststructuralism--with forays into quantum mechanics, new
materialism, and Buddhism as well, to give us entirely new ways of
viewing how humans use language to make sense of--and to make--the
world.
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