Buch, Englisch, Band 74, 209 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 230 mm, Gewicht: 517 g
Reihe: Cross/Cultures
New Essays on Mavis Gallant
Buch, Englisch, Band 74, 209 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 230 mm, Gewicht: 517 g
Reihe: Cross/Cultures
ISBN: 978-90-420-1683-5
Verlag: Brill | Rodopi
This book is an exploration of what Gallant’s readers are thinking now: where they place her in the panorama of literature and what meaning she has for them now. Scholars continue to probe into the stories, their characters, the capsules of history they present, and continue to find them challenging. As with Shakespeare, no amount of scrutiny will yield the final answer. That is how complex Gallant’s writing is. Especially now, when the positioning of her characters is a more prominent condition in general, we need to review Gallant’s artistic insights.
As Francine Prose says in Harper’s Magazine: Gallant’s cast of characters are a “motley assortment of refugees, fugitives, and travelers” and “displaced persons scrambling on the margins of a society they will never belong to.” This is the modern condition. As with other great writers, Gallant shows herself to be prophetic in cutting down to the roots of the sensibility of our era. We are reading her work, and we are thinking about it and talking about it. This book is part of that large conversation.
CONTRIBUTORS
Neil Besner, Di Brandt, Nicole Côté, John Lent, Gerald Lynch, Maria Noëlle Ng, Peter Stevens, Simone Vauthier, Per Winther
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface and Acknowledgements
An Intangible Cure for Death by Homesickness:
Gerald LYNCH: Mavis Gallant’s Canadian Short-Story Cycle “Linnet Muir”
Di BRANDT: Fascists, Mothers and Provisional Others in Mavis Gallant’s The Pegnitz Junction
John LENT: Transitory Closure in Mavis Gallant’s In Transit: A Writer’s View of the Transition from Modern
to Postmodern Poetics in Short Fiction.
Peter STEVENS: An “I” for an Evanescent Eye: The Personal and the Private – Autobiography, Essay and Story
Maria NOËLLENG: Women Out of Fleeting Place: Hotel Living in Mavis Gallant’s Short Stories
Nicole CÔTÉ: Mavis Gallant’s Shifting Poetics of Exile: The Ironic and the Oneiric in Two Early Short Stories.
Per WINTHER: The Volatile Eye of the Beholder: Voice, Epiphany and Grace in the Short Fiction of Mavis Gallant
Neil BESNER: Re-Reading “The Moslem Wife”: Fugitive Irony in the Light of Imagination
Simone VAUTHIER: Framing the Passing Recalcitrance of “The Wedding Ring”
Notes on Contributors