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Informationen zum Autor Scott Hames is Lecturer in Scottish Literature at the University of Stirling, where he is the director of the MLitt in Scottish Literature. He writes widely on Scottish writing and cultural politics, with a focus on questions of language and 'voice', and co-founded the International Journal of Scottish Literature. Klappentext ADD STANDARD SERIES BLURBThe Edinburgh Companion to James KelmanEdited by Scott HamesJames Kelman is one of the most important Scottish writers now living. His fiction is widely acclaimed, and widely caricatured. His art declares war on stereotypes, but is saddled with plenty of its own.This book attempts to disentangle Kelman's writing from his reputation, clarifying his literary influences and illuminating his political commitments. It is the first book to cover the full range and depth of Kelman's work, explaining his position within genres such as the short story and the polemical essay, and tracing his interest in anti-colonial politics and existential thought. Essays by leading experts combine lucid accounts of the heated debates surrounding Kelman's writing, with a sharp focus on the effects and innovations of that writing itself.Kelman's own reception by reviewers and journalists is examined as a shaping factor in the development of his career. Chapters situate Kelman's work in critical contexts ranging from masculinity to vernacular language, cover influences from Chomsky to Kafka, and pursue the implications of Kelman's rhetoric from Glasgow localism to 'World English'.Scott Hames is Lecturer in the Department of English Studies at the University of Stirling. He co-edits the International Journal of Scottish Literature. Zusammenfassung Lively and specially commissioned chapters cover the entire range of Kelman's writing - including novels! short stories! essays! polemics and plays - and the vigorous debates it has provoked. Inhaltsverzeichnis Part I. Literary Forms; 1. Early Kelman: Influences and Experiments; 2. How late it was, how late and Literary Value; 3. Narrative Limits: Kelman's Later Novels; 4. Kelman and the Short Story; 5. Critical and Polemical Writing; 6. Kelman's Drama. Part II. Critical Contexts; 7. Kelman's Glasgow Sentence; 8. Kelman's Art-Speech; 9. Kelman and World English; 10. Kelman and Masculinity; 11. Kelman and the Existentialists....