John Burnside: Contemporary Critical Perspectives: Contemporary Critical Perspectives
Editat de Dr Ben Daviesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 aug 2021
John Burnside: Contemporary Critical Perspectives brings together leading scholars of contemporary literature to guide readers through the full range of the author's writings, from his fiction and poetry to his autobiographical and nature writing, exploring texts such as The Dumb House, The Light Trap, A Lie about My Father, Glister and Black Cat Bone. The book examines the major themes of Burnside's work, including the environment and the natural world, hauntings and dwelling, and his intertextual engagement with philosophy, music and the visual arts. Featuring a timeline of Burnside's life, an interview with the writer himself and a detailed list of further reading, this is the first authoritative guide to this major contemporary writer.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350237445
ISBN-10: 1350237442
Pagini: 192
Dimensiuni: 152 x 232 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Contemporary Critical Perspectives
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350237442
Pagini: 192
Dimensiuni: 152 x 232 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Contemporary Critical Perspectives
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Series Editors' Preface
Foreword: Nicholas Royle
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Chronology of John Burnside's Life
INTRODUCTION By Way of an Introduction: John Burnside, Writer
Ben Davies (University of Portsmouth)
CHAPTER ONE John Burnside's Metaphysical World: From The Dumb House to A Summer of Drowning
Peter Childs (Newman University, Birmingham)
CHAPTER TWO John Burnside's Numinous Poetry
Jan Wilm (Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities, Essen, Germany)
CHAPTER THREE 'A temporary, sometimes fleeting thing': Home in John Burnside's Poetry
Monika Szuba (Gdansk University, Poland)
CHAPTER FOUR Violent Dwellings and Vulnerable Creatures in Burning Elvis and Something Like Happy
Alexandra Campbell (University of Edinburgh)
CHAPTER FIVE 'This learned set of limits and blames': Masculinity, Law and Prohibition in the Work of John Burnside
Ruth Cain (University of Kent)
CHAPTER SIX Consequences of Pastoral: The Dialectic of History and Ecology in The Light Trap
Tom Bristow (University of Durham)
CHAPTER SEVEN Walking the Tightrope: Félix Guattari's Three Ecologies and John Burnside's Glister
Phil Pass (Independent Scholar)
CHAPTER EIGHT 'A Kindred Shape': Hauntings, Spectres and the Poetics of Return in John Burnside's Verse
David Borthwick (University of Glasgow)
CHAPTER NINE 'It was suddenly hard winter': John Burnside's Crossings
Julian Wolfreys (University of Portsmouth)
INTERVIEW The Space at the back of the Mind: An Interview with John
Burnside
Ben Davies (University of Portsmouth)
Notes
Further Reading
Index
Foreword: Nicholas Royle
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Chronology of John Burnside's Life
INTRODUCTION By Way of an Introduction: John Burnside, Writer
Ben Davies (University of Portsmouth)
CHAPTER ONE John Burnside's Metaphysical World: From The Dumb House to A Summer of Drowning
Peter Childs (Newman University, Birmingham)
CHAPTER TWO John Burnside's Numinous Poetry
Jan Wilm (Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities, Essen, Germany)
CHAPTER THREE 'A temporary, sometimes fleeting thing': Home in John Burnside's Poetry
Monika Szuba (Gdansk University, Poland)
CHAPTER FOUR Violent Dwellings and Vulnerable Creatures in Burning Elvis and Something Like Happy
Alexandra Campbell (University of Edinburgh)
CHAPTER FIVE 'This learned set of limits and blames': Masculinity, Law and Prohibition in the Work of John Burnside
Ruth Cain (University of Kent)
CHAPTER SIX Consequences of Pastoral: The Dialectic of History and Ecology in The Light Trap
Tom Bristow (University of Durham)
CHAPTER SEVEN Walking the Tightrope: Félix Guattari's Three Ecologies and John Burnside's Glister
Phil Pass (Independent Scholar)
CHAPTER EIGHT 'A Kindred Shape': Hauntings, Spectres and the Poetics of Return in John Burnside's Verse
David Borthwick (University of Glasgow)
CHAPTER NINE 'It was suddenly hard winter': John Burnside's Crossings
Julian Wolfreys (University of Portsmouth)
INTERVIEW The Space at the back of the Mind: An Interview with John
Burnside
Ben Davies (University of Portsmouth)
Notes
Further Reading
Index
Recenzii
This is a rich and insightful collection. Drawing on a wide variety of Burnside's texts, and exploring themes ranging from masculinity to spirituality, and animals to ghosts, the contributors offer the most comprehensive account of Burnside's writing to date. The volume will expand readers' understanding of the diversity of Burnside's work, and cements his importance within the contemporary literary canon.
This first book-length academic survey of John Burnside's work brings home just how hard it is to think of another living writer whose distinctive style extends so impressively across poetry, memoir, and fiction. Often drawing on currents of thought with which Burnside is in sympathy (particularly the work of Heidegger), the expert contributors identify, analyse, and explore tropes and preoccupations that permeate his oeuvre. Special attention is paid to Burnside's deep ecological commitment, and to his often disturbing intermingling of haunted lyricism with irrationality, violence, and a frequently frustrated search for healing.
John Burnside: Contemporary Critical Perspectives provides a long overdue exploration of John Burnside's works. Though Burnside has received relatively little critical attention to date, he is one of the most important contemporary Scottish writers, with a prolific output spanning across genres. The essays collected here engage with all the major strands of Burnside's works, including his interest in the metaphysical, spiritual and supernatural, as well as issues of masculinity, gender and class. The volume's admirable breadth does justice to the expansiveness of Burnside's oeuvre, from his poems and novels, to his autobiographical and non-fiction writings.
This first book-length academic survey of John Burnside's work brings home just how hard it is to think of another living writer whose distinctive style extends so impressively across poetry, memoir, and fiction. Often drawing on currents of thought with which Burnside is in sympathy (particularly the work of Heidegger), the expert contributors identify, analyse, and explore tropes and preoccupations that permeate his oeuvre. Special attention is paid to Burnside's deep ecological commitment, and to his often disturbing intermingling of haunted lyricism with irrationality, violence, and a frequently frustrated search for healing.
John Burnside: Contemporary Critical Perspectives provides a long overdue exploration of John Burnside's works. Though Burnside has received relatively little critical attention to date, he is one of the most important contemporary Scottish writers, with a prolific output spanning across genres. The essays collected here engage with all the major strands of Burnside's works, including his interest in the metaphysical, spiritual and supernatural, as well as issues of masculinity, gender and class. The volume's admirable breadth does justice to the expansiveness of Burnside's oeuvre, from his poems and novels, to his autobiographical and non-fiction writings.