Textermination

Summary
In her latest novel, Textermination, the eminent British novelist/critic Christine Brooke-Rose pulls a wide array of characters out of the great works of literature and drops them into the middle of the San Francisco Hilton. Emma Bovary, Emma Woodhouse, Captain Ahab, Odysseus, Huck Finn... all are gathered for the Annual Convention of Prayer for Being, to meet, to discuss, to pray for their continued existence in the mind of the modern reader. But what begins as a grand enterprise erupts into total pandemonium: with characters from different times, places, and genres all battling for respect and asserting their own hard-won fame and reputations. Dealing with such topical literary issues as deconstruction, multiculturalism, and the Salman Rushdie affair, this wild and humorous satire pokes fun at the academy and ultimately brings into question the value of determining a literary canon at all.
Similar Books
-
Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature
by Erich Auerbach
-
Douglas Coupland
by Andrew Tate
-
Mary Higgins Clark: A Critical Companion
by Linda De Roche
-
Visions Across the Americas: Short Essays for Composition
by J. Sterling; Hilliard Warner
-
Portable Legacies: Fiction, Poetry, Drama, Nonfiction
by Jan Zlotnik Schmidt
-
Legacies: Fiction, Poetry, Drama, Nonfiction
by Jan Zlotnik Schmidt
-
Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness: A Casebook
by Gene M. Moore
-
Root and Branch
by Thomas Honegger
-
A History of Scandinavian Literature, 1870-1980
by Sven H. Rossel
-
A History of Scandinavian Literature, 1870-1980 (Volume 5)
by Sven H. Rossel
-
-
Aharon Appelfeld: From Individual Lament to Tribal Eternity
by Yigal Schwartz
-
Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Optimist Reformer
by Jill Rudd
-
-
Jules Verne Rediscovered: Didacticism and the Scientific Novel
by Arthur B. Evans
-
-
-
-
-
-
Emily Lawless (1845-1913): Writing the Interspace
by Heidi Hansson
-
Taking Sides: Stefan Heym's Historical Fiction
by Meg Tait