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Ancient Greek myth in world fiction since 1989 / edited by Justine McConnell and Edith Hall.

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Bloomsbury Collections: Classical Studies & Archaeology 2016 Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
McConnell, Justine, editor.
Hall, Edith, 1959- editor.
Series:
Bloomsbury studies in classical reception
Classical Studies & Archaeology 2016
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Literature, Modern--20th century--Classical influences.
Literature, Modern.
Literature, Modern--21st century--Classical influences.
Mythology, Classical, in literature.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (x, 273 pages).
Place of Publication:
London : Bloomsbury Academic, 2016.
System Details:
text file
Summary:
"Ancient Greek Myth in World Fiction since 1989 explores the diverse ways that contemporary world fiction has engaged with ancient Greek myth. Whether as a framing device, or a filter, or via resonances and parallels, Greek myth has proven fruitful for many writers of fiction since the end of the Cold War. This volume examines the varied ways that writers from around the world have turned to classical antiquity to articulate their own contemporary concerns. Featuring contributions by an international group of scholars from a number of disciplines, the volume offers a cutting-edge, interdisciplinary approach to contemporary literature from around the world. Analysing a range of significant authors and works, not usually brought together in one place, the book introduces readers to some less-familiar fiction, while demonstrating the central place that classical literature can claim in the global literary curriculum of the third millennium. The modern fiction covered is as varied as the acclaimed North American television series The Wire, contemporary Arab fiction, the Japanese novels of Haruki Murakami and the works of New Zealand's foremost Maori writer, Witi Ihimaera. This book explores the diverse ways that ancient Greek myth has been used in fiction internationally since 1989. Whether as a framing device, or a filter, or via resonances and parallels, Greek myth has proven fruitful for many writers of fiction since the end of the Cold War. Yet their engagement with it has been by no means homogeneous, and this volume examines the varied ways that writers from around the world have turned to classical antiquity to articulate their own contemporary concerns. While Greek myth and literature were key constituents in nineteenth-century realist and early twentieth-century modernist fiction, they faded in significance mid-century, at a time when V.S. Pritchett warned that the novel as a form would be inadequate to the cultural 'processing' of recent atrocities. However, the creative energies released by the end of the Cold War, the rise of the postcolonial novel, and the terrible recent conflicts in the Balkans, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Africa, which the collapse of the Soviet Union helped to engender, contributed to a remarkable renaissance of significant fiction which engaged once more with the Greeks. By drawing out this dimension, the volume challenges the conventional categorisation of works of fiction according to national tradition, even while the geographical range of the book includes works by Brazilian, French, German, Japanese, Indian, North American, Maori, African, Russian, Greek, Irish, and Arabic writers."--Bloomsbury Publishing.
Contents:
Introduction / Justine McConnell
From anthropophagy to allegory and back: a study of classical myth and the Brazilian novel / Patrice Rankine
Ibrahim al-Koni's Lost oasis as Atlantis and his demon as Typhon / William M. Hutchins
Greek myth and mythmaking in Witi Ihimaera's The matriarch (1986) and The dream swimmer / Simon Perris
War, religion and tragedy: the revolt of the muckers in Luiz Antonio de Assis Brasil's Videiras de Cristal / Sofia Frade
Translating myths, translating fictions / Lorna Hardwick
Echoes of ancient Greek myths in Murakami Haruki's novels and in other works of contemporary Japanese literature / Giorgio Amitrano
"It's all in the game": Greek myth and the wire / Adam Ganz
Writing a new Irish odyssey: Theresa Kishkan's A man in a distant field / Fiona Macintosh
The minotaur on the Russian internet: Viktor Pelevin's Helmet of horror / Anna Ljunggren
Diagnosis: overdose status: critical odysseys in Bernhard Schlink's Die Heimkehr / Sebastian Matzner
Narcissus and the Furies: myth and docufiction in Jonathan Littell's The kindly ones / Edith Hall
Philhellenic imperialism and the invention of the classical past: twenty-first century re-imaginings of Odysseus in the Greek war for independence / Efrossini Spentzou
The "Poem of force" in Australia: David Malouf, Ransom and Chloe Hooper, The tall man / Margaret Reynolds
Young female heroes from Sophocles to the twenty-first century / Helen Eastman
Generation Telemachus: Dinaw Mengestu's How to read the air, Ralph Ellison, and Homer / Justine McConnell.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Electronic reproduction. London : Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014. Available via World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreement. s2014 dcunns
Other Format:
Original
ISBN:
9781474256278
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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