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Informationen zum Autor G.P. Lainsbury Klappentext Raymond Carver's fiction is widely known for its careful documentation of lower-middle-class North America in the 1970s and 80s. Building upon the realist understanding of Carver's work, Raymond Carver's Chronotope uses a central concept of Bakhtin's novelistics to formulate a new context for understanding the celebrated author's minimalist fiction. G. P. Lainsbury describes the critical reception of Carver's work and stakes out his own intellectual and imaginative territory by arguing that Carver's fiction can be understood as diffuse, fragmentary, and randomly ordered. Offering a fresh analysis of Carver's body of work, this book offers an extensive meditation on this major figure in postmodern U.S. fiction. Zusammenfassung Arguing that Raymond Carver merits consideration as a major American writer, this text reveals his pivotal role in American minimalist fiction. It contextualizes Carver's work in terms of the time and place of its construction and represention to reveal it as fiction that transcends the lower middle class North American relity that it documents. Inhaltsverzeichnis Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 The Cultural and Aesthetic Construction of the Writer in a Depressed America; Chapter 3 Wilderness and the Natural in Hemingway and Carver; Chapter 4 Alienation and the Grotesque Body in the Fiction of Franz Kafka and Raymond Carver; Chapter 5 The Function of Family in the Carver Chronotope; Afterword;