Taking up four different political themes--human rights, the relation between public and private space, racial justice, and environmentalism-- After Critique suggests that the ontological forms emerging in contemporary U.S. fiction articulate a version of politics that might successfully evade neoliberal appropriation.
Taking up four different political themes--human rights, the relation between public and private space, racial justice, and environmentalism-- After Critique suggests that the ontological forms emerging in contemporary U.S. fiction articulate a version of politics that might successfully evade neoliberal appropriation.
Mitchum Huehls is Visiting Assistant Professor at UCLA.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction: We Have Never Been Neoliberal: Critique's Complicity, Capitulation's Promise * Chapter 1: Turning to Presence: The Contingent Persons of Human Rights Literature * Chapter 2: Embracing Objects: Public and Private Space in Literary Los Angeles * Chapter 3: Objectifying Race: Or, What African American Literature Is * Chapter 4: Welcoming the World: Post-Ecological Fiction * Coda: Accounting 101: Reading the Exomodern * Notes * Bibliography * Index
* Introduction: We Have Never Been Neoliberal: Critique's Complicity, Capitulation's Promise * Chapter 1: Turning to Presence: The Contingent Persons of Human Rights Literature * Chapter 2: Embracing Objects: Public and Private Space in Literary Los Angeles * Chapter 3: Objectifying Race: Or, What African American Literature Is * Chapter 4: Welcoming the World: Post-Ecological Fiction * Coda: Accounting 101: Reading the Exomodern * Notes * Bibliography * Index
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