ABSTRACT

This ambitious and wide-ranging essay collection analyses how identity and form intersect in twentieth- and twenty-first century literature. It revises and deconstructs the binary oppositions identity-form, content-form and body-mind through discussions of the role of the author in the interpretation of literary texts, the ways in which writers bypass or embrace identity politics and the function of identity and the body in form. Essays tackle these issues from a number of positions, including identity categories such as (dis)ability, gender, race and sexuality, as well as questioning these categories themselves. Essayists look at both identity as form and form as identity.

Although identity and form are both staples of current research on contemporary literature, they rarely meet in the way this collection allows. Authors studied include Beryl Bainbridge, Samuel Beckett, John Berryman, Brigid Brophy, Angela Carter, J.M. Coetzee, Anne Enright, William Faulkner, Mark Haddon, Ted Hughes, Kazuo Ishiguro, B.S. Johnson, A.L. Kennedy, Toby Litt, Hilary Mantel, Andrea Levy, Robert Lowell, Ian McEwan, Flannery O’Connor, Alice Oswald, Sylvia Plath, Jeremy Reed, Anne Sexton, Edith Sitwell, Wallace Stevens, Jeremy Reed, Jeanette Winterson and Virginia Woolf.

The book engages with key theoretical approaches to twentieth- and twenty-first century literature of the last twenty years while at the same time advancing new frameworks that enable readers to reconsider the identity and form conundrum. In both its choice of texts and diverse approaches, it will be of interest to those working on English and American Literatures, gender studies, queer studies, disability studies, postcolonial literature, and literature and philosophy.

part I|70 pages

Beyond Identity and Form

chapter 2|15 pages

“To be engulfed by you”

The Pull of Alienation in Narcissistic Narratives of the Sixties 1

chapter 3|17 pages

Literature in Process

Deleuzian Dynamics in the Fiction of A. L. Kennedy and Toby Litt

chapter 4|17 pages

History's Subjects

Forming the Nation in Andrea Levy's Small Island

part II|87 pages

Formal Prescriptions and Identity Politics

chapter 5|17 pages

From the “other side”

Mimicry and Feminist Rewriting in the Novels of Beryl Bainbridge

chapter 8|18 pages

Why Kazuo Ishiguro Is Stuck to the Margins

Formal Identities in Contemporary Literary Interpretations

chapter 9|16 pages

“Not yet not yet . . .”

Forms of Defiance, Forms of Excess in the Poetry of Alice Oswald

part III|87 pages

Physical Forms, Formal Identities

chapter 10|18 pages

The Confessional Other

Identity, Form, and Origins in Confessional Poetry

chapter 11|15 pages

Writing the Self into Being

Illness and Identity in Inga Clendinnen's Tiger's Eye and Hilary Mantel's Giving Up the Ghost

chapter 12|17 pages

Materiality and Manipulation

Trauma, Narrative, and the Body in Anne Enright's The Gathering

chapter 14|16 pages

From Virginia's Sister to Friday's Silence *

Presence, Metaphor, and the Persistence of Disability in Contemporary Writing