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The New Cambridge Companion to William Faulkner (Cambridge Companions to Literature)

The New Cambridge Companion to William Faulkner (Cambridge Companions to Literature)

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John T. Matthews
Cambridge University Press, 4/9/2015
EAN 9781107689565, ISBN10: 1107689562

Paperback, 258 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm
Language: English

The New Cambridge Companion to William Faulkner offers contemporary readers a sample of innovative approaches to interpreting and appreciating William Faulkner, who continues to inspire passionate readership worldwide. The essays here address a variety of topics in Faulkner's fiction, such as its reflection of the concurrent emergence of cinema, social inequality and rights movements, modern ways of imagining sexual identity and behavior, the South's history as a plantation economy and society, and the persistent effects of traumatic cultural and personal experience. This new Companion provides an introduction to the fresh ways Faulkner is being read in the twenty-first century, and bears witness to his continued importance as an American and world writer.

1. New media ecology Julian Murphet
2. History's dark markings
Faulkner and film's racial representation Peter Lurie
3. 'What moves at the margin'
William Faulkner and race Aliyyah I. Abdur-Rahman
4. Faulkner and biopolitics Patricia E. Chu
5. As I Lay Dying and the modern aesthetics of ecological crisis Susan Scott Parrish
6. Faulkner and trauma
on Sanctuary's originality Greg Forter
7. Queer Faulkner
whores, queers, and the transgressive south Jaime Harker
8. Faulkner and southern studies Melanie Benson Taylor
9. The Faulkner factor
influence and intertextuality in south fiction since 1965 Martyn Bone
10. They endured
the Faulknerian novel and post-45 American fiction Benjamin Widiss
11. A new region of the world
Faulkner, Glissant, and the Caribbean Hugues Azérad
12. The Faulknerian anthropocene
scales of time and history in The Wild Palms and Go Down, Moses Ramón Saldívar and Sylvan Goldberg
13. Reading Faulkner in and beyond postcolonial studies
'There is nowhere for us to go now but east' Randy Boyagoda.