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Trauma has become an important and influential paradigm for reading contemporary American literature. Conventional critical models of the phenomenon however often result in formulaic and cliched interpretations. This book breaks away from understanding trauma defined solely and narrowly according to psychoanalytic theories. Instead, it incorporates theories drawn from other fields, such as narratology, in order to analyse specific devices characteristically employed by writers in order to represent and, often, to mimic the effects of trauma. The author also focuses on important issues ignored…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Trauma has become an important and influential paradigm for reading contemporary American literature. Conventional critical models of the phenomenon however often result in formulaic and cliched interpretations. This book breaks away from understanding trauma defined solely and narrowly according to psychoanalytic theories. Instead, it incorporates theories drawn from other fields, such as narratology, in order to analyse specific devices characteristically employed by writers in order to represent and, often, to mimic the effects of trauma. The author also focuses on important issues ignored or underplayed by conventional theoretical understandings of trauma, such as the characteristics and effects of perpetrator narratives. The book is grouped around narrative devices and innovations, such as the metafictional inscription of the narrator into the text, and around important thematic concerns such as 9/11, the Iraq War, and reactions to the Bush administration.
'Gibbs drives a cart and horses through the conventional critical orthodoxies of trauma theory, demonstrating the decisive challenge offered by contemporary American writers. Brimming with fresh insights, rigorously argued and covering a wide range of contemporary narratives, the book sets a new agenda for the study of trauma and literature.' Judie Newman, University of Nottingham 'Alan Gibbs's Contemporary American Trauma Narratives delivers a powerful critique of key trauma-theoretical tenets - belatedness, literality, punctuality, non-narratability, and victim-centredness - and makes an eloquent case for trauma scholarship in the humanities to become more flexible, responsive, and pluralistic. Bold, lucid, and meticulously argued, it is a major intervention in the field and deserves a wide readership.' Stef Craps, Ghent University Examines the representation of trauma in contemporary American fiction and non-fiction This book looks at the way writers present the effects of trauma in their work. It explores narrative devices, such as metafiction, as well as events in contemporary America, including 9/11, the Iraq War and reactions to the Bush administration. Contemporary American authors who are discussed in depth include Joseph Heller, Kurt Vonnegut, Toni Morrison, Tim O'Brien, Lorrie Moore, Mark Danielewski, Art Spiegelman, Jonathan Safran Foer, Anthony Swofford, Evan Wright, Paul Auster, Philip Roth and Michael Chabon. Contemporary American Trauma Narratives offers a timely and dissenting intervention into debates about American writers' depiction of trauma and its consequences. Alan Gibbs is a lecturer in American Literature in the School of English, University College Cork, Ireland. He is the author of Henry Roth's Mercy of a Rude Stream: The Second Career of an American Novelist (2008). He has previously published on Jewish-American literature, crime fiction and on trauma in criticism, contemporary American literature and popular culture. Cover image: Katharine Dowson, Radiotherapy Patient 10, glass, 2011. Image courtesy of the artist and GV Art gallery, London. Cover design: www.hayesdesign.co.uk [EUP logo] www.euppublishing.com
Autorenporträt
Alan Gibbs is Lecturer in English (American) Literature at University College Cork. He has published over a dozen journal articles on subjects including Roth and Steinbeck, was the guest editor for a 115-page special edition of 'The Journal of the Short Story in English' devoted to the work of Henry Roth, and is the author of Henry Roth's Mercy of a Rude Stream (1994-98): The Second Career of an American Novelist (Mellen Press 2008).