Fr. 150.00

Rewriting - Postmodern Narrative and Cultural Critique in the Age of Cloning

English · Hardback

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Description

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Examines the tendency of post-World War II writers to rewrite earlier narratives by Poe, Melville, Hawthorne, and others.
Does the postmodern process of rewriting stories by earlier writers point to a crisis of originality in our cloning culture? In Rewriting, the first systematic examination of this tendency in late twentieth-century American fiction, Christian Moraru answers this question with a "no" by examining a wide range of representative writers including E. L. Doctorow, Robert Coover, Paul Auster, Charles Johnson, Ishmael Reed, Trey Ellis, Kathy Acker, Mark Leyner, and Bharati Mukherjee, among others. Moraru shows that in reworking the emblematic nineteenth-century short stories and novels of Hawthorne, Poe, Melville, Alger, Stowe, Thoreau, Twain, and others, postmodern American writers take on-and critically revise-a whole set of values and notions that shape our cultural mythology. Accordingly, Moraru redefines postmodernism in general, and postmodern rewriting in particular, as a culturally innovative and politically enabling phenomenon.


About the author










Christian Moraru is Assistant Professor of English at University of North Carolina, Greensboro.

Product details

Authors Christian Moraru
Publisher State University of New York Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 27.09.2001
 
EAN 9780791451076
ISBN 978-0-7914-5107-6
No. of pages 248
Dimensions 155 mm x 234 mm x 19 mm
Weight 449 g
Series Suny Series in Postmodern Cult
Suny Postmodern Culture
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > English linguistics / literary studies

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