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Author Scott, Jeremy (Jeremy David)

Title The demotic voice in contemporary British fiction / Jeremy Scott
Published Basingstoke : Palgrave Macmillan, 2009

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Description 1 online resource (vii, 272 pages)
Contents Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: A Story so Far? -- Paradigms: a Taxonomy of Narrative Technique -- Antecedents: 'The Right to Write a Voice' -- Graham Swift's Last Orders: the Polyphonic Novel -- How Late It Was, How Late for James Kelman's 'Folk Novel' -- Alan Warner: Art-speech and the Morvern Paradox -- The Demotic, the Mandarin and the Proletentious: Martin Amis, Will Self and English Art-speech -- Pitfalls and Potentialities: Niall Griffiths and Anne Donovan -- Conclusions: the Clamouring Continues' -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary Contemporary British fiction often features demotic narrative voices taken from 'everyday' contexts, using regional or national dialects. This writing aims in part to narrow the gap between the agencies of author and character so that both speak on the same plane, and engages with significant issues of regional, national and cultural identity in modern Britain. This book focuses on the works of James Kelman, Alan Warner, Graham Swift, Will Self, Martin Amis, Niall Griffiths and Anne Donovan (amongst others) and tries to assess the extent to which their narrative techniques succeed or fail - for example, modes of notation for regional and national dialects, and ways of representing 'internal' voices as opposed to spoken ones. An essential underlying question is whether a character's voice can ever be represented 'uncontaminated' by the author. Can the character be set free from its creator? The book draws upon the disciplines of stylistics and narratology for its theoretical apparatus, but the topic is also approached from a practical angle; in other words, from the point of view of issues which inform and affect the 'hands on' work of crafting narrative fiction. Another ambition is to bridge the wide (and unnecessary?) gap between the theory and practice of writing fiction
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject English fiction -- 20th century -- History and criticism
English fiction -- 21st century -- History and criticism
Narration (Rhetoric)
Identity (Philosophical concept) in literature.
Sociolinguistics in literature.
Literary essays.
Literary theory.
LITERARY CRITICISM -- European -- English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh.
Literature.
English fiction
Identity (Philosophical concept) in literature
Narration (Rhetoric)
Sociolinguistics in literature
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780230236882
023023688X