Cover image for Moving across a Century : Women's Short Fiction from Virginia Woolf to Ali Smith.
Moving across a Century : Women's Short Fiction from Virginia Woolf to Ali Smith.
Title:
Moving across a Century : Women's Short Fiction from Virginia Woolf to Ali Smith.
Author:
Lojo Rodriguez, Laura Ma<.
ISBN:
9783035104912
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (145 pages)
Series:
Spanish Perspectives on English and American Literature, Communication and Culture ; v.8

Spanish Perspectives on English and American Literature, Communication and Culture
Contents:
Table of Contents VII -- Acknowledgements IX -- Introduction 1 -LAURA Ma LOJO RODRÍGUEZ AND JORGE SACIDO ROMERO -- Chapter 1. The Shape of Things to Come: Virginia Woolf's"The Mark on the Wall" 15 - JULIÁN DÍAZ MARTÍNEZ AND LOURDES E. SALGADO VIÑAL -- Chapter 2. "Flying off on Tangents": Katherine Mansfi eld's Short Stories 29­ - MARÍA CASADO VILLANUEVA -- Chapter 3. "Shifting the Ground": Elizabeth Bowen's Late Modernism Foreshadows a Postmodern Aesthetics 55 - IRENE IGLESIAS PENA -- Chapter 4. "In Me More Than Myself ": Enjoyment at the Heart of the Symbolic in Angela Carter's Short Fiction 83 - ANA Ma LOSADA PÉREZ -- Chapter 5. Coming to Terms with Postmodern Artifi ciality: Reassessing Nature in Ali Smith's The Whole Storyand other stories 111 - CELINA SÁNCHEZ GARCÍA -- Notes on Contributors 125 -- Index 129.
Abstract:
The difference between modernism and postmodernism has been object to constant revision from a variety of critical perspectives. The present collection of essays on women's short fiction tackles anew this thorny distinction from the theoretical perspective sketched by psychoanalytical philosopher Slavoj Zizek. According to Zizek, modernism hints at the incompleteness of the Symbolic Order, but does so from a separate, marginal and alternative sphere of enjoyment. Postmodernism, on the contrary, exposes the fundamental inconsistency of the Symbolic Order by giving it a central place at the very core of the text. The key distinguishing feature is the mutation of the status of paternal authority throughout a century to which modernist and postmodernist texts are responsive. Starting from this theoretical premise, this volume analyses the work of five major women practitioners of the short story - Virginia Woolf, Katherine Mansfield, Elizabeth Bowen, Angela Carter, and Ali Smith - to offer fresh critical readings of canonical pieces that exhibit either a modernist or a postmodernist sensibility. The volume has, therefore, both critical and theoretical value: it redefines Woolf 's and Mansfield's modernist status, the transitional character of Bowen's short stories, and the different versions of postmodernism found in the work of Carter and Smith, while, at once, contributing to the reassessment of modernism and postmodernism from a new theoretical angle. The methodological consistency of the book - half-way between collection of essays and monograph - places it at a remove from the usual collection of critical pieces from disparate perspectives around a particular issue.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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