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"Understatements have certainly become Swift’s speciality, resounding throughout his fictions of ethical consequence illuminated by Stef Craps in this valuable new study. Craps’s
approach is far from pedestrian. Within its single-author format,
what makes this book distinctive is that it proceeds chronologically
while working hard to focus its thematic coverage, distinguishing
itself from a standard text-by-text exposition." David James, writing in Textual Practice
“This excellent book is a detailed, carefully balanced and
well-informed study of this major contemporary writer. Most impressively,
it has a strong grasp of both the complex currents of Swift’s
fiction and of current debates in literary studies and theory over
issues of trauma and ethics. Indeed, Stef Craps’ luminous and
detailed study, while more than this, could be seen as a case study
for the effectiveness of these ideas for understanding a major contemporary
writer. Certainly, it will shape how Swift’s writing is understood.” Robert
Eaglestone, Royal Holloway, University of London; editor of Routledge
Critical Thinkers
“This book not only offers brilliant analyses of Swift's novels,
it also makes a significant impact on trauma studies. Craps argues
that
traumatic histories are the central themes in Swift’s literary
oeuvre. But more importantly, he demonstrates that Swift’s
own medium – storytelling – is crucial in working through
trauma.” Ernst van Alphen, University of Leiden / University
of California, Berkeley; author of Caught by History: Holocaust Effects
in Contemporary Art, Literature, and Theory
“[This book] deserves to be widely known and discussed among those interested
in Swift's novels. . . . The virtues of Craps's study are considerable. These
include close and subtle argument, a consistent vision of what he wants to say,
and a clarity of exposition. In addition, Craps puts Swift's work in an interesting
and complex European context. . . . In short, Trauma and Ethics in the Novels
of Graham Swift is
an excellent study that will play an important role in Swift studies for a long
time.” David Malcolm, author of Understanding Graham Swift,
writing in The European English Messenger
“Working across the fields of ethical criticism and trauma theory, this
volume offers a detailed and innovative study of the fiction of Graham Swift,
providing perceptive readings of all his major novels. . . . overall, this is
a clearly argued, intelligent and engaging study, which makes valuable contributions
both to the field of trauma studies and to Swift criticism.” Anne Whitehead,
author of Trauma Fiction, writing in English Studies
This book offers a critical reading of
the novels of Graham Swift in light of recent developments in literary
theory and criticism. It shows how the novels elaborate
an ethics of alterity by means of a detailed study of one of Swift’s
most persistent and fascinating – yet all too often ignored
– concerns: the traumatic experience of reality.
Swift’s texts evoke the cultural pathologies
of a nation (post-war Britain) and an era (modernity) through the
narratives of individual characters who are struggling to come to
terms with a traumatic personal and collective past. This study
charts the entire trajectory of Swift’s engagement with the
perils, pitfalls and possibilities of navigating a post-traumatic
condition, proceeding from an emphasis on denial in his early work,
through an intense preoccupation with the demands of trauma in the
“middle-period” novels (including Waterland),
to a seemingly liberating insistence on regeneration and renewal
in Last Orders and The Light of Day.
By providing a wide-ranging and in-depth analysis of Swift’s novels against the background of the “ethical turn” in literary studies and the emergence of trauma theory, this book extends and enriches our understanding of what is arguably one of the most significant literary oeuvres of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.
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List of Contents to follow |
Publication Details
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ISBN: |
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9781845190040 h/b |
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Page Extent / Format: |
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230 pp. / 229 x 152 mm |
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Release Date: |
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June 2005 |
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Illustrated: |
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No |
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Hardback Price: |
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£45.00 / $65.00 |
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