Figures of Complexity in Contemporary Fiction
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Publishing:30th Jun '26
£90.00
This title is due to be published on 30th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Explores the manifold ways that complexity is framed, understood and negotiated in contemporary Anglophone fiction How does fiction—including both print books and digital literature in the video game medium—imagine the complexity of issues such as migration or climate change? How does it envisage our societies’ dependence on technological networks and supply chains that most of us don’t understand? Figures of Complexity shows how fiction pushes complexity beyond its associations with desirable nuance and instead links it to material, psychological and ethical pitfalls that are distinctive of the present moment—a sense of reality getting out of hand, being difficult or overpowering, or facing us with unsolvable moral dilemmas. Through its engagement with works by authors such as Omar El Akkad, Lauren Groff, Yaa Gyasi and Hanya Yanagihara, the book examines a wide range of imaginative responses to these challenges.
This is a much-needed book that combines the literary, narrative and experiential aspects of complexity with those of urgent current social issues, including climate change, migration, and the effects of colonial history. Through carefully chosen examples and eloquent analysis, Marco Caracciolo traces the formal as well as affective aspects of complexity that literary and real-world situations share, making the former a paradigm for the latter, and giving strong attestation to the importance of narrative complexity as an analytical tool for understanding art and life alike. -- Maria Poulaki, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
ISBN: 9781399561150
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
224 pages