Strange Narrators in Contemporary Fiction

Explorations in Readers' Engagement with Characters

Marco Caracciolo author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Nebraska Press

Published:1st Dec '16

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Strange Narrators in Contemporary Fiction cover

A storyteller’s craft can often be judged by how convincingly the narrative captures the identity and personality of its characters. In this book, the characters who take center stage are “strange” first-person narrators: they are fascinating because of how they are at odds with what the reader would wish or expect to hear—while remaining reassuringly familiar in voice, interactions, and conversations. Combining literary analysis with research in cognitive and social psychology, Marco Caracciolo focuses on readers’ encounters with the “strange” narrators of ten contemporary novels, including Bret Easton Ellis’s American Psycho, Haruki Murakami’s Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World, and Mark Haddon’s The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Caracciolo explores readers’ responses to narrators who suffer from neurocognitive or developmental disorders, who are mentally disturbed due to multiple personality disorder or psychopathy, whose consciousness is split between two parallel dimensions or is disembodied, who are animals, or who lose their sanity.
A foray into current work on reception, reader-response, cognitive literary study, and narratology, Strange Narrators in Contemporary Fiction illustrates why any encounter with a fictional text is a complex negotiation of interlaced feelings, thoughts, experiences, and interpretations.

"Beyond Caracciolo’s interventions in narrative theory and studies of reader response to literary texts, Strange Narrators is valuable because of its focused attention to online reviews of fiction."—Mary Foltz, The Year’s Work in English Studies
“The book’s argument is as complex as it is ambitious and very much on the front lines of current work in reception, reader-response, cognitive literary study, and narratology. . . . It should have a strong market not only among narratologists and cognitive literary theorists, but a wide range of literary theorists of many stripes.”—H. Porter Abbott, professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the author of The Cambridge Introduction to Narrative
 
“The particular approach, methodology, and corpus make this contribution quite innovative and yield valuable insights and results.”—Rüdiger Heinze, professor of American literary and cultural studies at the University of Brunswick–Institute of Technology in Germany

ISBN: 9780803294967

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

288 pages