Loading...

Reading without Maps?

Cultural Landmarks in a Post-Canonical Age- A Tribute to Gilbert Debusscher

by Christophe Den Tandt (Volume editor)
©2005 Others 412 Pages

Summary

Among the intellectual debates of the last forty years, the critique of cultural canons has attracted the highest share of public attention, stirring academic, educational, and media controversies on both sides of the Atlantic.
Postmodernism, feminism, postcolonialism, and multiculturalism have refashioned the attitudes of educators and audiences towards cultural memory, opening up curricula to subjects and traditions previously excluded from the humanities. Predictably, these new critical practices have triggered heated responses from commentators fearing that culture and education might thereby be deprived of their capacity to provide audiences and learners with proper groundings and landmarks. The present volume gathers contributions that throw light on multiple aspects of this reconfiguration of cultural memory. It brings together essays focusing on the dynamics of canon formation in several fields – literature, drama, film, and music. Contributors examine how writers and communities find their bearings in a cultural landscape more complex than that previously envisaged by advocates of the Great Tradition. Specifically, the present essays throw light on the status of modernist writing, drama in English, or popular genres within the new canonical topography elaborated at the turn of the twenty-first century.

Details

Pages
412
Publication Year
2005
ISBN (Softcover)
9789052012834
Language
English
Keywords
Canon formation Postcolonialism Englisch Literatur Postmoderne Geschichte 1945-2000 Aufsatzsammlung literatures /English Drama criticism Literary criticism Drama in English the avant-garde
Published
Bruxelles, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2005. 412 pp., 10 ill.

Biographical notes

Christophe Den Tandt (Volume editor)

The Editor: Christophe Den Tandt teaches literatures in English and literary theory at the Université Libre de Bruxelles. He is the author of The Urban Sublime in American Literary Naturalism (1998) and of articles on US literature, popular culture (music, crime novels, science fiction), and postmodernist theory.

Previous

Title: Reading without Maps?