Katarzyna Nowak McNeice
California and the Melancholic American Identity in Joan Didion's Novels
Exiled from Eden
Katarzyna Nowak McNeice
California and the Melancholic American Identity in Joan Didion's Novels
Exiled from Eden
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The book traces the progress of the way Californian identity is portrayed in Joan Didion's novels.
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The book traces the progress of the way Californian identity is portrayed in Joan Didion's novels.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 202
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Dezember 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 13mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9781138370418
- ISBN-10: 113837041X
- Artikelnr.: 56896952
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 202
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Dezember 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 13mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9781138370418
- ISBN-10: 113837041X
- Artikelnr.: 56896952
Katarzyna Nowak-McNeice is a Conex-Marie Curie Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain. She obtained her doctoral degree from the University of Wroclaw, Poland, in 2005. She is the author of Melancholic Travelers: Autonomy, Hybridity and the Maternal (Peter Lang, 2007) and co-editor of Interiors: Interiority/ Exteriority in Literary and Cultural Discourse (Cambridge Scholars, 2010) and A Dark California: Essays on Dystopian Depictions in Popular Culture (McFarland, 2017), as well as essays, reviews and translations.
Introduction
Part 1: Joan Didion, the Native Daughter
Didion the Sacramentan, Californian, Westerner
Critical Reception
Joan Didion's Melancholy California
Part 2: Californian Losses and Melancholia
The Myth of an Empty Frontier
How Joan Didion Expelled Herself from Paradise
Racial Melancholia and the Emergence of Conscience
The Social Dimension of Melancholia
Chapter 1: The Loss of Nature
Problems with American Nature
Problems with The Garden of Eden
The Paradoxes of Nature
Writing to Remember and to Redeem
Pioneers and Ancestors
Purification through Fire
The Howling Wilderness: The California Desert
Turner's and Didion's Frontierless West
Chapter 2: The Loss of History
Manifest Destiny and Its Fulfillment in California
Freedom from History
History, Nature, and Hysteria
"A History of Accidents"
"You Can't Call This a Bad Place"
The Freeway Experience
Escaping the Meaninglessness of History
Chapter 3: The Loss of Ethics
The Emergence of Conscience
The Melancholic Donner Party
Desire and the Wagon-Train Morality
Betrayals of Familial Loyalty
Life as Gambling
Parental Influence
Parental Transgressions
Chapter 4: The Loss of Language
Looking Awry at Conscience and Loss
The Language of Melancholia
The Limits of Language
Estrangement from the Body
Translation and Betrayal
The Modern Pioneers and the Loss of Memory
The Language of Democracy
Conclusion
Part 1: Joan Didion, the Native Daughter
Didion the Sacramentan, Californian, Westerner
Critical Reception
Joan Didion's Melancholy California
Part 2: Californian Losses and Melancholia
The Myth of an Empty Frontier
How Joan Didion Expelled Herself from Paradise
Racial Melancholia and the Emergence of Conscience
The Social Dimension of Melancholia
Chapter 1: The Loss of Nature
Problems with American Nature
Problems with The Garden of Eden
The Paradoxes of Nature
Writing to Remember and to Redeem
Pioneers and Ancestors
Purification through Fire
The Howling Wilderness: The California Desert
Turner's and Didion's Frontierless West
Chapter 2: The Loss of History
Manifest Destiny and Its Fulfillment in California
Freedom from History
History, Nature, and Hysteria
"A History of Accidents"
"You Can't Call This a Bad Place"
The Freeway Experience
Escaping the Meaninglessness of History
Chapter 3: The Loss of Ethics
The Emergence of Conscience
The Melancholic Donner Party
Desire and the Wagon-Train Morality
Betrayals of Familial Loyalty
Life as Gambling
Parental Influence
Parental Transgressions
Chapter 4: The Loss of Language
Looking Awry at Conscience and Loss
The Language of Melancholia
The Limits of Language
Estrangement from the Body
Translation and Betrayal
The Modern Pioneers and the Loss of Memory
The Language of Democracy
Conclusion
Introduction
Part 1: Joan Didion, the Native Daughter
Didion the Sacramentan, Californian, Westerner
Critical Reception
Joan Didion's Melancholy California
Part 2: Californian Losses and Melancholia
The Myth of an Empty Frontier
How Joan Didion Expelled Herself from Paradise
Racial Melancholia and the Emergence of Conscience
The Social Dimension of Melancholia
Chapter 1: The Loss of Nature
Problems with American Nature
Problems with The Garden of Eden
The Paradoxes of Nature
Writing to Remember and to Redeem
Pioneers and Ancestors
Purification through Fire
The Howling Wilderness: The California Desert
Turner's and Didion's Frontierless West
Chapter 2: The Loss of History
Manifest Destiny and Its Fulfillment in California
Freedom from History
History, Nature, and Hysteria
"A History of Accidents"
"You Can't Call This a Bad Place"
The Freeway Experience
Escaping the Meaninglessness of History
Chapter 3: The Loss of Ethics
The Emergence of Conscience
The Melancholic Donner Party
Desire and the Wagon-Train Morality
Betrayals of Familial Loyalty
Life as Gambling
Parental Influence
Parental Transgressions
Chapter 4: The Loss of Language
Looking Awry at Conscience and Loss
The Language of Melancholia
The Limits of Language
Estrangement from the Body
Translation and Betrayal
The Modern Pioneers and the Loss of Memory
The Language of Democracy
Conclusion
Part 1: Joan Didion, the Native Daughter
Didion the Sacramentan, Californian, Westerner
Critical Reception
Joan Didion's Melancholy California
Part 2: Californian Losses and Melancholia
The Myth of an Empty Frontier
How Joan Didion Expelled Herself from Paradise
Racial Melancholia and the Emergence of Conscience
The Social Dimension of Melancholia
Chapter 1: The Loss of Nature
Problems with American Nature
Problems with The Garden of Eden
The Paradoxes of Nature
Writing to Remember and to Redeem
Pioneers and Ancestors
Purification through Fire
The Howling Wilderness: The California Desert
Turner's and Didion's Frontierless West
Chapter 2: The Loss of History
Manifest Destiny and Its Fulfillment in California
Freedom from History
History, Nature, and Hysteria
"A History of Accidents"
"You Can't Call This a Bad Place"
The Freeway Experience
Escaping the Meaninglessness of History
Chapter 3: The Loss of Ethics
The Emergence of Conscience
The Melancholic Donner Party
Desire and the Wagon-Train Morality
Betrayals of Familial Loyalty
Life as Gambling
Parental Influence
Parental Transgressions
Chapter 4: The Loss of Language
Looking Awry at Conscience and Loss
The Language of Melancholia
The Limits of Language
Estrangement from the Body
Translation and Betrayal
The Modern Pioneers and the Loss of Memory
The Language of Democracy
Conclusion