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Suicide Century
Literature and Suicide from James Joyce to David Foster Wallace
Suicide Century investigates suicide as an increasingly 'normalised' but still deeply traumatic and profoundly baffling act in twentieth-century writing.
Andrew Bennett (Author)
9781108418041, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 5 October 2017
276 pages
23.5 x 15.9 x 2 cm, 0.54 kg
Suicide Century investigates suicide as a prominent theme in twentieth-century and contemporary literature. Andrew Bennett argues that with the waning of religious and legal prohibitions on suicide in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and the increasing influence of medical and sociological accounts of its causes and significance in the twentieth century, literature responds to the act and idea as an increasingly normalised but incessantly baffling phenomenon. Discussing works by a number of major authors from the long twentieth century, the book explores the way that suicide makes and unmakes subjects, assumes and disrupts meaning, induces and resists empathy, and insists on and makes inconceivable our understanding of ourselves and of others.
1. Literature and suicide
2. 'The animal that can commit suicide': history, philosophy, literature
3. A world without meaning: Ford Madox Ford and modernist suicide
4. 'The love that kills': love, art, and everyday suicide in James Joyce
5. 'death death death lovely death': Stevie Smith, Sylvia Plath, and the idea of suicide
6. 'What must it have been like?': suicide and empathy in contemporary fiction
7. Inside David Foster Wallace's head: attention, loneliness, boredom, and suicide
Epilogue: the contemporary suicide memoir.
Subject Areas: Literary studies: poetry & poets [DSC], Literature: history & criticism [DS], Literature & literary studies [D]