Search results for ""Author Kenneth K. Brandt""
Liverpool University Press Jack London
Book SynopsisThis study explores how Jack London’s Northland odyssey - along with an insatiable intellectual curiosity, a hardscrabble youth in the San Francisco Bay Area, and an acute craving for social justice - launched the literary career of one of America’s most dynamic 20th-century writers.Trade Review'"Multum in Parvo" would be an appropriate title for this review. Seldom have I read a scholarly book that provided so much useful content in so few pages... Jack London has finally achieved recognition in his own country as a major author for all literary sseasons.'Earle Labor, Western American Literature
£53.62
Reaktion Books Jack London
Book Synopsis"Jack London (1876–1916) by any standards lived a life of excess. London’s exuberant energies propelled him out of the working class to become a world-famous writer by the age of 27, after stints as a child labourer, an oyster pirate, a Pacific seaman and a convict. He wrote extensively about his travels to Japan, the Yukon, the slums of London’s East End, Korea, Hawaii and the South Seas. The author of classics such as The Call of the Wild and The Sea-Wolf emerges in Kenneth K. Brandt’s new biography as a vital and flawed embodiment of conflicting yearnings. London’s writings, bolstered by their wildly clashing philosophical viewpoints derived from thinkers like Nietzsche, Marx, and Darwin, continue to engross readers with their depictions of primal urges, raw sensations and reformist politics."Trade Review“In bold, declarative sentences, Brandt states the facts of Jack London's life by tying them together in a thrilling and economical narrative. It should be the first biography anyone consults.” -- Jay Williams, author of the three-volume "Author Under Sail: The Imagination of Jack London" and general editor of "The Complete Works of Jack London""Brandt presents this 'visionary storyteller' through careful analysis of each of [London’s] literary works: a must read for those who want to know the story behind this author’s great works." -- Iris Jamahl Dunkle, author of '"Charmian Kittredge London: Trailblazer, Author, Adventurer"
£18.02
Lexington Books The Nonhuman in American Literary Naturalism
Book SynopsisThe Nonhuman in American Literary Naturalism offers a new perspective on American literary naturalism that considers those under-researched aspects of the genre that can be gathered under the term the Nonhuman. The contributors, an international team of scholars, have turned their attention to that which becomes visible when the human subject is skirted, or perhaps, temporarily at least, moved off-center: in other words, the representation of nonhuman animals and other vital or inert species, things, entities, cityscapes and seascapes, that also appear and play an important part in American literary naturalism. Informed by animal studies, ecocriticism, posthumanism, new materialism, and other recent theoretical and philosophical perspectives, the essays in this collection discuss early naturalist texts by Norris, Crane, Dreiser, London, Wharton and Cather, as well as more recent followers in the tradition of American literary naturalism: Hemingway, Agee & Evans, Petry, Hamilton, Dick, Vonnegut, Tepper, and DeLillo. The collection responds to a need to expand and refine the connections among nonhuman studies and texts associated with American literary naturalism and to productively expand the scholarly discourse surrounding this vital movement in American literary history. Trade ReviewIn this volume, scholars from Italy, Canada, Finland, Sweden, and the U.S.A. investigate works of American literary naturalism through the intersection of literature, culture, and the physical environment. By analyzing the Nonhuman elements surrounding human subjects in classic and contemporary naturalist writers, the contributors create fresh insights into the links between theory and criticism and the global ecological crisis. -- Susan Nuernberg, University of Wisconsin-OshkoshThe Nonhuman in American Literary Naturalism is an illuminating and provocative collection that will stimulate readers to expand their humancentric perspectives to understand the role of the nonhuman—animals, but also entities, processes, and agricultural and urban spaces—in literary naturalism and also its heir, science fiction. -- Keith Newlin, Editor, The Oxford Handbook of American Literary Naturalism and The Oxford Handbook of American Literary RealismThis book makes a substantial contribution to ecocritical and animal studies scholarship. Engaging with (post)humanism, literary aesthetics, and cultural theory, the collection offers fascinating analyses of relationships between humans and Nature—wild and cultivated, constructed, imagined, represented, and speculative. These fresh, original readings demonstrate, more than ever, the continued relevance of American literary naturalism as a field for expanding conversations about humans’ interaction with the environment, human agency, ethics, and aesthetics. -- Anita Duneer, author of Jack London and the SeaTable of ContentsContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroductionSection I: Other Species Chapter 1. The Outer Animals: Non-Othered Nonhumans in McTeague Karin M. DanielssonChapter 2: Jack London and the Perils of Human Exceptionalism—or Jack London’s Call for Species Interdependence Paul CrumbleyChapter 3: The Social Contract and Human-Animal Equality in Dreiser’s “McEwen of the Shining Slave Makers” Patti LuedeckeChapter 4: Extinction, Genocide, and Atomic Anxiety: Storks in Hemingway’s Under KilimanjaroLisa Tyler Section II: Land and SeaChapter 5: Environment, Emotion, and the Individual in “The Open Boat” Rob WelchChapter 6: Anthropomorphism Reconsidered: Nature Faking in Jack London’s “All Gold Canyon” Paul BaggettChapter 7: “Love” of the Land as Agrilogistic Tragedy in O Pioneers!: Hazards while Embracing Nonhumans Ryan HedigerSection III: Cityscapes and PseudonatureChapter 8: Wharton’s Architectural Imagination in The House of Mirth Daniel DufournaudChapter 9: Pseudonature in Edith Wharton’s The House of Mirth Jency WilsonChapter 10: Naturalism’s Nonhuman Streets: Food and Waste in Ann Petry’s WritingCara Erdheim KilgallenSection IV: Image, Object, TextChapter 11: Between Word and Image: Western Landscape and Photographic Rhetoric in Stephen Crane’s Prose Writing Francesca RazziChapter 12: “The Cruel Radiance of What Is”: The Reality of Things in James Agee and Walker Evans’s Let Us Now Praise Famous Men Markku LehtimäkiSection V: Last ThingsChapter 13 Trouble with Human-Nonhuman Distinctions in Dreiser, London, Hamilton, and DickKenneth K. Brandt Chapter 14: Davids and Goliaths: Last Days Reconciliation Between Humans and Nonhumans in Don DeLillo’s Zero K and Kurt Vonnegut’s Galápagos Ingemar HaagChapter 15: Writing What Remains: Naturalism and the Nonhuman after Nature in Sheri S. Tepper’s Plague of Angels Trilogy Stephanie StudzinskiIndexAbout the Contributors
£72.90