ABSTRACT

American Fiction of the 1990s: Reflections of History and Culture brings together essays from international experts to examine one of the most vital and energized decades in American literature. This volume reads the rich body of 1990s American fiction in the context of key cultural concerns of the period.

The issues that the contributors identify as especially productive include:

  • Immigration and America’s geographical borders, particularly those with Latin America
  • Racial tensions, race relations and racial exchanges
  • Historical memory and the recording of history
  • Sex, scandal and the politicization of sexuality
  • Postmodern technologies, terrorism and paranoia

American Fiction of the 1990s examines texts by established authors such as Don DeLillo, Toni Morrison, Philip Roth and Thomas Pynchon, who write some of their most ambitious work in the period, but also by emergent writers, such as Sherman Alexie, Chang-Rae Lee, E. Annie Proulx, David Foster Wallace, and Jonathan Franzen. Offering new insight into both the literature and the culture of the period, as well as the interaction between the two in a way that furthers the New American Studies, this volume will be essential reading for students and lecturers of American literature and culture and late twentieth-century fiction.

Contributors include: Timothy Aubry, Alex Blazer, Kasia Boddy, Stephen J. Burn, Andrew Dix, Brian Jarvis, Suzanne W. Jones, Peter Knight, A. Robert Lee, Stacey Olster, Derek Parker Royal, Krishna Sen, Zoe Trodd, Andrew Warnes and Nahem Yousaf.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part |45 pages

Transnational borders

chapter |14 pages

Outside in

Latino/a un-bordering in US fiction

chapter |14 pages

America as diaphor

Cultural translation in Bharati Mukherjee's The Holder of the World

part |43 pages

Race cathexes

chapter |13 pages

Red, white and black

Racial exchanges in fiction by Sherman Alexie

chapter |13 pages

In the shadow of the gun

African-American fiction and the anxieties of nostalgia

chapter |15 pages

Tragic no more?

The reappearance of the racially mixed character

part |43 pages

Historical narratives

chapter |13 pages

The way we were (n't)

Origins and empire in Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon

chapter |14 pages

Skating on a shit field

Tim O'Brien and the topography of trauma

part |41 pages

Sex images

chapter |13 pages

A painful progress

Queer fiction and the American protest literature tradition

chapter |13 pages

Regular Lolitas

The afterlives of an American adolescent

part |44 pages

Postmodern technologies

chapter |14 pages

Selfless cravings

Addiction and recovery in David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest

chapter |15 pages

The end of postmodernism

American fiction at the millennium