Produktbild: Oxf His Nov Eng Brit Ir 1940 Vol7 Ohne C

Oxf His Nov Eng Brit Ir 1940 Vol7 Ohne C Volume 7: British and Irish Fiction Since 1940

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

04.02.2016

Herausgeber

Peter Boxall + weitere

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

624

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17,5/3,8 cm

Gewicht

1227 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-874939-4

Beschreibung

Rezension

a fascinating compendium of a lot of very lifelike activity from British and Irish novelists over the past seventy years Ben Jeffery, Times Literary Supplement

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

04.02.2016

Herausgeber

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

624

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17,5/3,8 cm

Gewicht

1227 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-874939-4

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Oxf His Nov Eng Brit Ir 1940 Vol7 Ohne C
    • Introduction: The Life and Death of the Post-War Novel

    • Part 1: 1940-1973: Key Figures and Contexts

    • 1: Andrew Nash: The Material History of the Novel I: 1940-1973

    • 2: Lara Feigel: Fiction during the Second World War

    • 3: Robert Eaglestone: The Question of Evil: Neo-Christianity and the Novel

    • 4: Nicola Wilson: Working Class Fictions

    • 5: John McLeod: The Novel and the End of Empire

    • 6: C.L. Innes: Migrant Writing

    • 7: Liz Sage: Women's Fiction after the War

    • 8: Zachary Leader: The Movement towards Englishness

    • 9: Tyrus Miller: The Continuities of Late Modernism: Before and after Beckett

    • 10: Philip Tew: Comedy, Class and Nation

    • 11: Michael Cronin: In the Wake of Joyce: Irish Writing after 1939

    • 12: Rod Mengham: Judging the Distance: Fiction with Europe in Mind

    • Part 2: Genres/Subgenres

    • 13: Laura Marcus: Cinematic and Televisual Fiction

    • 14: John Brannigan: The Novel as History

    • 15: Nick Bentley: The Novel Sequence

    • 16: Adrian Hunter: Novel, Novella, Short Story

    • 17: Martin Priestman: Spies, Detectives and Heroes: From the Cold War to the War on Terror

    • 18: Peter Hunt: The Children's Novel

    • 19: Emma Parker: Queers, Chaps, Chicks and Lads

    • 20: Nadia Valman: Jewish Fictions

    • 21: Liam Connell: The Regional and the Global

    • 22: Sherryl Vint: Dystopian Science Fiction and the Return of the Gothic

    • Part 3: 1973-Present: Key Figures and Contexts

    • 23: Andrew Nash: The Material History of the Novel II 1973-Present

    • 24: Paul Crosthwaite: Fiction and Trauma from the Second World War to 9/11

    • 25: David James: Decentring Englishness

    • 26: Mary Eagleton: The Feminist Novel

    • 27: Peter Morey: Black British and British Asian Fiction

    • 28: Matthew Hart: A Plurinational Literature? Nationalism in British and Northern Irish Fiction Since 1970

    • 29: Scott Hames: The New Scottish Renaissance?

    • 30: Derek Hand: Ireland and Europe after 1973

    • 31: Kirsti Bohata: Welsh Fiction: 1979, 1997 and after

    • Part IV: Approaching the Twenty-first Century Novel

    • 32: Berthold Schoene: Twenty-First Century Fiction

    • 33: Peter Boxall and Bryan Cheyette: The Future of the Novel