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Crossing borders - both physically and imaginatively - is part of
our 'nomadic' postmodern identity, but transcultural and
transnational exchanges have also played a major role in the
centuries-long processes of hybridisation that helped to fashion
the vast geographic, political and imaginative container of
diversity we call Europe. This volume gathers together the work of
scholars from several European countries in an attempt to encourage
a collective reflection upon historical - and often 'mythical' -
locations and landscapes, as well as upon the thresholds and
faultlines that unite or separate them. The issues the volume
tackles are delicate and complex, for the encounter of differences
engenders both curiosity and suspicion and there is no easy way to
create a new synthesis while respecting and promoting diversity.
However, since Europe is inevitably a cultural and political entity
'in the making', Europeans should embrace the 'great narrative' of
a 'utopian project', uniting their efforts to work towards a
civilisation that is grounded on plurality and openness.
Nominated for the Mystery Writers of America 'Edgar Awards'!"" ""
"A Counter-History of Crime Fiction" takes a new look at the
evolution of crime fiction, drawing on material from the Middle
Ages up to the early Twentieth century, when the genre was
theoretically defined as detective fiction. Considering
'criminography' as a system of inter-related, even incestuous,
sub-genres, Maurizio Ascari explores the connections between modes
of literature such as revenge tragedies and providential fictions,
the gothic and the ghost story, urban mysteries and anarchist
fiction, while taking into account the influence of pseudo-sciences
such as mesmerism and criminal anthropology.
In an age of world citizenship, literary scholarship is focusing
increasingly on texts which communicate effectively over cultural
lines. Advocating a planetary approach to contemporary literature,
this critical text examines eight novels from eight cultures. The
writers discussed are Julian Barnes, Magda Szabo, Abraham B.
Yehoshua, Ian McEwan, W.G. Sebald, Murakami Haruki, Jonathan Safran
Foer, and Azar Nafisi. Focusing on the authors' encouragement to
meditate on life's most pressing issues, the essays here invite us
to reevaluate postmodernism as a current category.
Nominated for the Mystery Writers of America 'Edgar Awards' "" ""
"A Counter-History of Crime Fiction" takes a new look at the
evolution of crime fiction, drawing on material from the Middle
Ages up to the early Twentieth century, when the genre was
theoretically defined as detective fiction. Considering
'criminography' as a system of inter-related, even incestuous,
sub-genres, Maurizio Ascari explores the connections between modes
of literature such as revenge tragedies and providential fictions,
the gothic and the ghost story, urban mysteries and anarchist
fiction, while taking into account the influence of pseudo-sciences
such as mesmerism and criminal anthropology.
This collection of essays brings together an international team of
scholars with the aim to shed new light on various interconnected
aspects of the Gothic through the lens of converging critical and
methodological approaches. With its wide-ranging interdisciplinary
perspective, the book explores the domains of literary, pictorial,
filmic, televisual and popular cultural texts in English from the
eighteenth century to the present day. Within these pages, the
Gothic is discussed as a dynamic form that exceeds the concept of
literary genre, proving able to renovate and adapt through constant
processes of hybridisation. Investigating the hypothesis that the
Gothic returns in times of cultural crisis, this study maps out
transgressive and experimental modes conducive to alternative
experiences of the intricacies of the human (and post-human)
condition.
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