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E-raamat: Working-Class Writing: Theory and Practice

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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Nov-2018
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319963105
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Nov-2018
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319963105

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This book updates our understanding of working-class fiction by focusing on its continued relevance to the social and intellectual contexts of the age of Trump and Brexit. The volume draws together new and established scholars in the field, whose intersectional analyses use postcolonial and feminist ideas, amongst others, to explore key theoretical approaches to working-class writing and discuss works by a range of authors, including Ethel Carnie Holdsworth, Jack Hilton, Mulk Raj Anand, Simon Blumenfeld, Pat Barker, Gordon Burn, and Zadie Smith. A key informing argument is not only that working-class writing shows ‘working class’ to be a diverse and dynamic rather than monolithic category, but also that a greater critical attention to class, and the working class in particular, extends both the methods and objects of literary studies. This collection will appeal to students, scholars and academics interested in working-class writing and the need to diversify the curriculum.


1 Introduction
1(16)
Ben Clarke
Nick Hubble
Part I Theories
2 Working-Class Writing and Experimentation
17(24)
Ben Clarke
3 Interwoven Histories: Working Class Literature and Theory
41(20)
Jack Windle
4 Meaning It: Everyday Hermeneutics and the Language of Class in Literary Scholarship
61(20)
Cassandra Falke
5 Kings in Disguise and `Pure Ellen Kellond": Literary Social Passing in the Early Twentieth Century
81(18)
Luke Seaber
6 Democratic Art or Working-Class Literature? Virginia Woolf, the Women's Cooperative Guild and Literary Value in the `Introductory Letter'
99(22)
Natasha Periyan
7 The Bakhtin Circle in Caribbean London: Race, Class and Narrative Strategy
121(22)
Matti Ron
8 "Look at the State of This Place!": The Impact of Domestic Space on Post-war Class Consciousness
143(24)
Simon Lee
Part II Practices
9 Ethel Carnie Holdsworth's Helen of Four Gates: Recasting Melodrama in Novel and Cinematic Form
167(20)
Pamela Fox
10 Representation of the Working Classes of the British Colonies and/as the Subalterns in Mulk Raj Anand's Coolie
187(20)
Sabujkoli Bandopadhyay
11 London Jewish and Working-Class? Social Mobility and Boundary-Crossing in Simon Blumenfeld and Alexander Baron
207(22)
Jason Finch
12 The Deindustrial Novel: Twenty-First-Century British Fiction and the Working Class
229(18)
Phil O'Brien
13 Working-Class Heritage Revisited in Alan Warner's The Deadman's Pedal
247(22)
Peter Clandfield
14 Respectability, Nostalgia and Shame in Contemporary English Working-Class Fiction
269(20)
Nick Hubble
Index 289
Ben Clarke is Associate Professor of Post-1900 British Literature at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, USA. He is author of Orwell in Context (2007) and co-author of Understanding Richard Hoggart (2011). He has published on subjects including public house and mining communities, and authors including Jack Hilton, H. G. Wells, Edward Upward, and Virginia Woolf.

Nick Hubble is Reader in English at Brunel University London, UK and the author of Mass Observation and Everyday Life (2006) and The Proletarian Answer to the Modernist Question (2017).