Novels from Reagan's America A New Realism
by
Joseph Dewey Introducing the term "spectacle realism," Joseph Dewey analyzes eight contemporary novels that extend the current understanding of American literary realism, the authors of which possess a moral energy and compassion often obscured in postmodern writing. For nearly 100 years, Dewey says, American realism produced novels that treated most bleakly the major events in peoples liveslike falling in love or facing death. Focusing on the Reagan era, Dewey examines a group of popular novelists (Joyce Carol Oates, John Irving, Reynolds Price, T. Coraghessan Boyle, William Kennedy, Robert Ferro, Anne Tyler, and Richard Powers) who departed from that traditional realism. Their characters move beyond disillusionment to affirmation, finding that engagement with the signature events of their lives brings rewards rather than punishment.
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"If postmodern play is literatures equivalent
to Disney World, then Dewey introduces us to authors who
work against the glitz, who try to find something worth
committing to in a world of simulacra."Kathryn
Hume, Distinguished Professor of English, Pennsylvania
State University
Titles of Related Interest: American Literary Mentors, The Fiction of Ellen Gilchrist, Jewett and Her Contemporaries, Italo Calvino, Arms Akimbo, Colette, Beauvoir, and Duras, |