UID:
almahu_9948089731502882
Format:
XI, 205 p. 1 illus.
,
online resource.
ISBN:
9783030173012
Content:
This book explores the intersection between the recent work on queer temporality and the experiments of literary modernism. Kate Haffey argues that queer theory’s recent work on time owes a debt to modernist authors who developed new ways of representing temporality in their texts. By reading a series of early twentieth-century literary texts from modernists like Woolf, Eliot, Faulkner, and Stein alongside contemporary authors, this book examines the way in which modernist writers challenged narrative conventions of time in ways that both illuminate and foreshadow current scholarship on queer temporality. In her analyses of contemporary novelists and critics Michael Cunningham, Jeanette Winterson, Angela Carter, and Eve Sedgwick, Haffey also shows that these modernist temporalities have been reconfigured by contemporary authors to develop new approaches to futurity.
Note:
1. Introduction: Queer Moments and Eddies in Time -- 2. Exquisite Moments and the Temporality of the Kiss in Mrs. Dalloway and The Hours -- 3. “Still and Moving”: Winterson, Eliot, and the Dance in Time -- 4. Telling Queer Tales: Narration and Genealogical Time in William Faulkner and Angela Carter -- 5. “Pure Child”: The Temporality of Childishness in Sedgwick and Stein -- 6. Conclusion: Figuring the Future: Queer Time in Contemporary Literature. .
In:
Springer eBooks
Additional Edition:
Printed edition: ISBN 9783030173005
Additional Edition:
Printed edition: ISBN 9783030173029
Additional Edition:
Printed edition: ISBN 9783030173036
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-030-17301-2
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17301-2