Description

Book Synopsis

Decoded: New Essays on Zadie Smith examines the middle period of Zadie Smith's illustrious career as a dynamic, experimental novelist of contemporary Black British writing. The five new essays in Decoded, written by innovative scholars in the fields of British literature and African Diasporic studies, bring together the most original and current analysis of Smith's novels and literary criticism since the release of Smith's NW (2012). Decoded includes discussions of NW, Swing Time, The Embassy of Cambodia, Grand Union, Changing My Mind, Feel Free, and Intimations. The essays delve into Smith's philosophy about the role and responsibility of the artist, her ardent defense of the function of the novel in the digital age, and the connection between writers and readers. Also illuminated is Smith's growth as a writer, her reconceptualization of racial identity, and shifting literary techniques from hysterical realism

Table of Contents

Introduction – Daniel South: Modelling Citizens: From a Digital to a Literary Public Sphere in NW and Swing Time – James Arnett: Zadie Smith’s George Eliot’s Spinoza and Everybody: The Ethics of Austere Realism – Matthias Stephan: Transmodern Identity Construction in Later Zadie Smith – Dr. Alberto Fernández Carbajal: “[U] nder the Sign of Love”: Blackface Minstrelsy’s Trauma, Racial Exploitation, and Kinaesthetic Hauntologies in Zadie Smith’s Swing Time – Tracey L. Walters: The Quest for Knowledge: The Intellectual Woman in Zadie Smith’s Novels.

Decoded

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      Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
      Publication Date: 1/23/2021 12:12:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781433165627, 978-1433165627
      ISBN10: 1433165627

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Decoded: New Essays on Zadie Smith examines the middle period of Zadie Smith's illustrious career as a dynamic, experimental novelist of contemporary Black British writing. The five new essays in Decoded, written by innovative scholars in the fields of British literature and African Diasporic studies, bring together the most original and current analysis of Smith's novels and literary criticism since the release of Smith's NW (2012). Decoded includes discussions of NW, Swing Time, The Embassy of Cambodia, Grand Union, Changing My Mind, Feel Free, and Intimations. The essays delve into Smith's philosophy about the role and responsibility of the artist, her ardent defense of the function of the novel in the digital age, and the connection between writers and readers. Also illuminated is Smith's growth as a writer, her reconceptualization of racial identity, and shifting literary techniques from hysterical realism

      Table of Contents

      Introduction – Daniel South: Modelling Citizens: From a Digital to a Literary Public Sphere in NW and Swing Time – James Arnett: Zadie Smith’s George Eliot’s Spinoza and Everybody: The Ethics of Austere Realism – Matthias Stephan: Transmodern Identity Construction in Later Zadie Smith – Dr. Alberto Fernández Carbajal: “[U] nder the Sign of Love”: Blackface Minstrelsy’s Trauma, Racial Exploitation, and Kinaesthetic Hauntologies in Zadie Smith’s Swing Time – Tracey L. Walters: The Quest for Knowledge: The Intellectual Woman in Zadie Smith’s Novels.

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