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Hope and Kinship Contemporary Fiction: Moods Modes of Temporality Belonging
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Hope and Kinship Contemporary Fiction: Moods Modes of Temporality Belonging
Current price: $120.00
Barnes and Noble
Hope and Kinship Contemporary Fiction: Moods Modes of Temporality Belonging
Current price: $120.00
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Size: Hardcover
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Explores the emphasis that contemporary novels, films and television series place on the present, arguing that hope emerges from the potentiality of the here and now, rather than the future, and as intimately entangled with negotiations of structures of belonging.
Taking its cue from an understanding of hope as connoting an organizing temporality, one which is often presumed to be projecting into a future,
Hope and Kinship in Contemporary Fiction
challenges this understanding, arguing that hope emerges in practices of relationality in the present, disentangling hope from a necessary correlation with futurity.
Through close readings of contemporary works, including
The Road
,
The Walking Dead
Cloud Atlas
Sense8, The People in the Trees
and
A Little Life
, Gero Bauer investigates how these texts explore structures of kinship as creative and affective practices of belonging and care that claim spaces beyond the heterosexual, reproductive nuclear family. In this context, fictional figurations of the child – often considered the bearer of the future – are of particular interest.
Through these interventions into definitions of and reflections on fictional manifestations of hope and kinship, Bauer's analyses intersect with queer theory, new materialism and postcritical approaches to literature and cultural studies, moving towards counterintuitively hopeful readings of the present moment.
Taking its cue from an understanding of hope as connoting an organizing temporality, one which is often presumed to be projecting into a future,
Hope and Kinship in Contemporary Fiction
challenges this understanding, arguing that hope emerges in practices of relationality in the present, disentangling hope from a necessary correlation with futurity.
Through close readings of contemporary works, including
The Road
,
The Walking Dead
Cloud Atlas
Sense8, The People in the Trees
and
A Little Life
, Gero Bauer investigates how these texts explore structures of kinship as creative and affective practices of belonging and care that claim spaces beyond the heterosexual, reproductive nuclear family. In this context, fictional figurations of the child – often considered the bearer of the future – are of particular interest.
Through these interventions into definitions of and reflections on fictional manifestations of hope and kinship, Bauer's analyses intersect with queer theory, new materialism and postcritical approaches to literature and cultural studies, moving towards counterintuitively hopeful readings of the present moment.