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Affect and American Literature in the Age of Neoliberalism

Affect and American Literature in the Age of Neoliberalism examines the relationship between contemporary American literature and politics.

Rachel Greenwald Smith (Author)

9781107095229, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 20 April 2015

194 pages, 1 table
23.6 x 15.8 x 1.8 cm, 0.43 kg

Rachel Greenwald Smith's Affect and American Literature in the Age of Neoliberalism examines the relationship between American literature and politics in the twentieth- and twenty-first centuries. Smith contends that the representation of emotions in contemporary fiction emphasizes the personal lives of characters at a time when there is an unprecedented, and often damaging, focus on the individual in American life. Through readings of works by Paul Auster, Karen Tei Yamashita, Ben Marcus, Lydia Millet, and others who stage experiments in the relationship between feeling and form, Smith argues for the centrality of a counter-tradition in contemporary literature concerned with impersonal feelings: feelings that challenge the neoliberal notion that emotions are the property of the self.

1. Personal and impersonal: two forms of the neoliberal novel
2. Affect and aesthetics in 9/11 fiction
3. Reading like an entrepreneur: neoliberal agency and textual systems
4. Ecology, feeling, and form in neoliberal literature.

Subject Areas: Politics & government [JP], History of the Americas [HBJK], Literary studies: fiction, novelists & prose writers [DSK], Literary studies: from c 1900 - [DSBH]

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