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E-raamat: Reconsidering Flannery O'Connor

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  • Formaat: 274 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Nov-2020
  • Kirjastus: University Press of Mississippi
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781496831811
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  • Formaat: 274 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Nov-2020
  • Kirjastus: University Press of Mississippi
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781496831811

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The National Endowment for the Humanities has funded two Summer Institutes titled "Reconsidering Flannery O'Connor", which invited scholars to rethink approaches to Flannery O'Connor's work. Drawing largely on research that started as part of the 2014 NEH Institute, this collection shares its title and its mission. Featuring fourteen new essays, Reconsidering Flannery O'Connor disrupts a few commonplace assumptions of O'Connor studies while also circling back to some old questions that are due for new attention.

The volume opens with "New Methodologies", which features theoretical approaches not typically associated with O'Connor's fiction in order to gain new insights into her work. The second section, "New Contexts", stretches expectations on literary genre, on popular archetypes in her stories, and on how we should interpret her work. The third section, lovingly called "Strange Bedfellows", puts O'Connor in dialogue with overlooked or neglected conversation partners, while the final section, "O'Connor's Legacy", reconsiders her personal views on creative writing and her wishes regarding the handling of her estate upon death. With these final essays, the collection comes full circle, attesting to the hazards that come from overly relying on O'Connor's interpretation of her own work but also from ignoring her views and desires. Through these reconsiderations, some of which draw on previously unpublished archival material, the collection attests to and promotes the vitality of scholarship on Flannery O'Connor.
Acknowledgments ix
Recovering Interpretative Possibilities in the Fiction of Flannery O'Connor: An Introduction
3(16)
Alison Arant
Jordan Cofer
PART 1 NEW METHODOLOGIES
Feather Method: Rereading O'Connor in the Age of the Object
19(17)
Gina Caison
"God Made Me Thisaway": Crip-queer Perspectives on Flannery O'Connor
36(14)
Bruce Henderson
The "Failure of ... Compassion": Problematic Redemption and the Need for Praxis in "The Lame Shall Enter First" and "The Comforts of Home"
50(13)
Alicia Matheny Beeson
"The Words to Say It": Using Flannery O'Connor to Reconsider Lacan
63(16)
Doreen Fowler
PART 2 NEW CONTEXTS
Flannery O'Connor's Gothic Science Fiction
79(16)
Doug Davis
The Trouble with "Innerleckchuls": Flannery O'Connor, Anti-Intellectualism, and the Iowa Writers' Workshop
95(17)
Jordan Cofer
Country People: Depictions of Farm Women in Flannery O'Connor's Short Fiction
112(15)
Monica Carol Miller
PART 3 STRANGE BEDFELLOWS
Mystery and Myth: Friedrich Nietzsche, Flannery O'Connor, and the Limiting Power of Certainty
127(13)
William Murray
Flannery O'Connor and the Fascist Business: Plurality and the Possibility of Community
140(22)
Alison Staudinger
"Herself but Black": Richard Wright, Flannery O'Connor, and the "Near Enemy" of Civil Rights
162(19)
Rachel Watson
Inscrutable Zoot Suiters and Civil Rights Ambivalence in Flannery O'Connor and Toni Morrison
181(16)
Alison Arant
Silence, Scalpels, and Loupes: Reconsidering O'Connor as Sylvia Plath's Contemporary
197(20)
Lindsey Alexander
PART 4 O'CONNOR'S LEGACY
Saint Flannery, Approximately: O'Connor and the Dogma of Creative Writing
217(17)
Eric Bennett
Flannery O'Connor's Real Estate: Farming Intellectual Property
234(17)
Carol Loeb Shloss
Afterword 251(4)
Marshall Bruce Gentry
Contributors 255(4)
Index 259
Alison Arant is associate professor and department chair in English at Wagner College on Staten Island in New York City. Her work has appeared in Flannery O'Connor Review, Modern Fiction Studies, Mississippi Quarterly, and Southern Literary Journal.

Jordan Cofer is associate provost and professor of English at Georgia College. He is author of The Gospel According to Flannery O'Connor and coauthor of Writing the Nation: A Concise Introduction to American Literature 1865 to Present.

Marshall Bruce Gentry is author of Flannery O'Connor's Religion of the Grotesque and coeditor (with William L. Stull) of Conversations with Raymond Carver, both published by University Press of Mississippi.