Crossing Boundaries: Thinking through Literature
By (Author) Julie Scanlon
Edited by Amy Waste
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
1st June 2001
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
809
Paperback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
300g
An eclectic collection of studies ranging through nineteenth and twentieth-century literature, performance, music and film and provoking theoretical and critical reflections. This eclectic collection interrogates boundaries with reference to nineteenth and twentieth-century literature, performance, music and film from a diverse range of critical and theoretical perspectives. The authors probe the issue of negotiating boundaries in their innovative and imaginative investigations of science in Dickens, Eliot and Pater; narrative in Hawking and Weinberg; Bakhtin and the feminization of translation; lesbian romance by Jeanette Winterson; transitional females in migrant postcolonial fiction; pedagogy in South Africa; materiality and hypertext; the semiotic and money in Jay Mclnerney; the role of cliche in Beckett; music in Wim Wenders; the 'real' in fiction, theory and performance; creative and academic writing; politics and aesthetics. Original contributions by Terry Eagleton and Sally Shuttleworth support this volume's exciting challenge to established boundaries and help to make it a scintillating and thought-provoking read.
Julie Scanlon is currently completing a PhD at the University of Sheffield. Amy Waste received her PhD from the University of Sheffield and is currently living in California.