American Fictions: 1980-2000

Whose America Is It Anyway?

by Frederick R Karl


Formats

Softcover
$42.95
Hardcover
$58.95
Softcover
$42.95

Book Details

Language :
Publication Date : 12/11/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5.5x8.5
Page Count : 532
ISBN : 9781401016586
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 5.5x8.5
Page Count : 532
ISBN : 9781401016593

About the Book

American Fictions: 1980-2000–Whose America Is It Anyway? is a successor volume to my American Fictions: 1940-1980, published in 1983. Like the preceding book, it analyzes what has happened to American fiction (short stories as well as novels) in the last twenty years against a background of social, political, and general cultural events and change, down to the end of the century. It includes most of the major trends in fiction and attempts to be inclusive. Several novels which did not receive their due when they appeared are given extended treatment, such as Brodkey’s The Runaway Soul and McElroy’s Women and Men; many other novels which were passed by because they were too difficult or too bizarre are discussed in some depth. This book does not include summaries; everything is analyzed extensively. Major movements such as Minimalism, the New Realism, the very long novel (which I call the Mega-Novel), the Vietnam War novel (as compared and contrasted with its World War Two predecessors), the Short Story and its languages are part of the study. The book also introduces a long chapter on the spate of autobiographical-fictional-memoirs which appeared in the 1980s and early 90s; as well as a comparison of Roth’s America with Updike’s, with the former’s Nathan Zuckerman and the latter’s Rabbit. Another chapter attempts to show that while Black, Jewish, and Women writers may have differing agendas, they overlap to a great extent as “American writers,” not as separate entities. The book concludes with a long chapter on the 1990s and where we are going. A distinctive part of that chapter includes current literature by Latino, Asian-American, and Native-American writers, who in the last two decades or so have entered profoundly into American fictions.


About the Author

Frederick R. Karl is the author of several books: biographies of Joseph Conrad, William Faulkner, Franz Kafka, and George Eliot; as well as several volumes of literary criticism, among them American Fictions: 1940-1980 and Modern and Modernism. He is, also, general editor and volume co-editor of the Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad. His most recent books for Xlibris are American Fictions: 1980-2000 and Quest for Biography. Married, father of three daughters, and grandfather of five children, he has taught at the City College of New York, Columbia, and New York University.