British Avant-garde Fiction Of The 1960s

Edited by Kaye Mitchell , Nonia Williams
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British Avant-garde Fiction Of The 1960s

Edited by Kaye Mitchell , Nonia Williams
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Found in: Arts & Letters, Literary Criticism

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Overview

280 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Nov 10, 2020
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 280
  • Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
  • ISBN: 9781474436205
  • Dimensions: 6.14" W x 1.0" L x 9.21" H

Kaye Mitchell is Senior Lecturer in Contemporary Literature and Director of the Centre for New Writing at the University of Manchester. She has published three monographs, most recently Writing Shame: Contemporary Literature, Gender and Negative Affect (2020). Her editorial publications include a collection of essays on the British author Sarah Waters (2013), a special issue of Contemporary Women’s Writing (2015) on experimental women’s writing, and a co-edited collection of essays (with Nonia Williams), British Avant-Garde Fiction of the 1960s (2019). Kaye is the UK editor of the journal Contemporary Women’s Writing, is on the editorial board of Open Gender in Germany and C21 in the UK, and is a series editor of Bloomsbury’s ‘Contemporary Critical Perspectives’ series.

Nonia Williams is a Lecturer in Modern and Contemporary Literature at the University of East Anglia. Recent publications include ‘(Re)turning to Quin: An Introduction’ in Women: A Cultural Review (2022); ‘“Designing its Own Shadow”: tracing Ann Quin’s reiterative experimental processes’ (2021); ‘About/Of Madness: Ann Quin's The Unmapped Country’ in Textual Practice (2020) and British Avant-Garde Fiction of the 1960s (EUP, 2019).

The coverage is superb - from well-known figures such as Muriel Spark to relatively neglected but important writers such as Eva Figes, each examined from a range of cultural, aesthetic and political perspectives. At last, the myth of the mid-century as an excluded middle - between the monolithic experimental 'isms' of the modern and the postmodern - is being exploded.

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