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Margaret Atwood Professor J. Brooks Bouson

Margaret Atwood By Professor J. Brooks Bouson

Summary

A collection of original essays offering contemporary critical readings and assessments of three well known Atwood texts - "The Robber Bride", "The Blind Assassin", and "Oryx and Crake". It reveals not only Atwood's engagement with the issues that have long preoccupied her, but also her increasing formal complexity as a novelist.

Margaret Atwood Summary

Margaret Atwood: The Robber Bride, The Blind Assassin, Oryx and Crake by Professor J. Brooks Bouson

In this critical collection, well-known Atwood scholars offer original readings and critical re-evaluations of three Atwood masterpiecesGCo The Robber Bride, The Blind Assassin, and Oryx and Crake. Providing new critical assessments of Atwood's novels in language that is both lively and accessible, Margaret Atwood reveals not only Atwood's ongoing and evolving engagement with the issues that have long preoccupied herGCoranging from the power politics of human relationships to a concern with human rights and the global environmentGCobut also her increasing formal complexity as a novelist. If Atwood is a novelist who is part trickster, illusionist and con-artist, as she has often described herself, she is also, as the essays in this critical collection show, an author-ethicist with a finely honed sense of moral responsibility.

Margaret Atwood Reviews

We welcome this new collection of essays on Margaret Atwood's later novels, the first to include a substantial section on Oryx and Crake. J.Brooks Bouson has assembled an international team of major Atwood scholars who show us fascinating new ways of understanding Atwood's fiction by highlighting features which range from magic realism to environmentalism and debt, trauma narratives, and her apocalyptic imagination. The critical inventiveness of these essays matches Atwood's own irrepressibly creative storytelling. -- Coral Ann Howells, Professor Emerita, University of Reading, Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of English Studies, University of London, UK and co-editor of the Cambridge History of Canadian Literature (CUP, 2009)
... readers should appreciate the series' clear purpose and excellent essays. The series is a welcome addition to scholarship. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. -- Continuum Studies in Contemporary North American Fiction group review in CHOICE
Rather than limiting itself to a thematic study of the novels, Bousons volume finds its strength in the variety of foci among the nine individual chapters, which includes Atwoods adaptations of many literary genres and narrative techniques as well as such sociocultural issues as female victimization and environmental destruction. At the same time, the collection successfully foregrounds concerns that are central to Atwoods fiction, such as womens relationships to each other, to feminism, and to literary traditions, resulting in a well-balanced overview of the authors work and the scholarship on it. -- Tomoko Kuribayashi, University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point * Contemporary Women's Writing *

About Professor J. Brooks Bouson

J. Brooks Bouson is a Professor of English at Loyola University in Chicago, USA.

Table of Contents

Series Preface; Acknowledgments; 1. Introduction: Negotiating with Margaret Atwood J. Brooks Bouson; Part I: The Robber Bride (1993) 2. Magical Realism in The Robber Bride and Other Texts Sharon R. Wilson; 3. Parodic Border Crossings in Atwood's The Robber Bride Hilde Staels; 4. You're History: Living with Trauma in The Robber Bride Laurie Vickroy; Part II: The Blind Assassin (2000) 5. "Was I My Sister's Keeper?" The Blind Assassin and Problematic Feminisms Fiona Tolan; 6. Narrative Multiplicity and the Multi-layered Self in Margaret Atwood's The Blind Assassin Magali Cornier Michael; 7. "If You Look Long Enough": Photography, Memory, and Mourning in The Blind Assassin Shuli Barzilai; Part III: Oryx and Crake (2003) 8. Moral/Environmental Debt in Margaret Atwood's Payback and Oryx and Crake Shannon Hengen; 9. Problematic Paradice: Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake Karen Stein; 10. The Apocalyptic Imagination in Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake Mark Bosco; Notes on Chapters; Works Cited; Further Reading; Notes on Contributors; Index.

Additional information

NPB9780826424372
9780826424372
0826424376
Margaret Atwood: The Robber Bride, The Blind Assassin, Oryx and Crake by Professor J. Brooks Bouson
New
Hardback
Continuum Publishing Corporation
2011-05-15
224
N/A
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