Techniques of subversion in modern literature : transgression, abjection, and the carnivalesque
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Techniques of subversion in modern literature : transgression, abjection, and the carnivalesque
University of Florida Press : University Presses of Florida [distributor], c1991
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 274-290) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In ""Techniques of Subversion in Modern Literature"", Booker maintains that literary works contribute to genuine social change. When read with ""transgressive energy"", he says, these works chip away at oppressive political structures and undermine authoritarian ideologies. The hard evidence of such power is the terror with which totalitarian regimes traditionally have regarded ""dangerous"" literary works. A number of recent theoretical discourses frame his exploration of the dynamics of literary transgressions, including especially the notions of the carnival as put forth by Mikhail Bakhtin and of the abject as put forth by Julia Kristeva. What this book adds to recent discussion is the specific application of the theory to detailed readings of such authors as Rushdie, Carter, Barnes, Pynchon, Fowles, Sorrentino, Wittig, Calvino and even Chaucer. All the authors share ""a tendency to break rules, transgress boundaries, destabilize hierarchies, and question authority,"" Booker says. ""Techniques of Subversion"" should be of especial interest to scholars of modern and postmodern literature, particularly those who approach it within the context of poststructuralism, cultural criticism and politics.
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