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Naming the Father

Legacies, Genealogies, and Explorations of Fatherhood in Modern and Contemporary Literature

Eva Paulino Bueno, Terry Caesar, William Hummel
Barcode 9780739100929
Paperback

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Release Date: 30/05/2000

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Social Sciences
Label: Lexington Books
Contributors: Kent Baxter (Contributions by), Gaylord Brewer (Contributions by), Laura Alonso Gallo (Contributions by), Jonathan Gill (Contributions by), Geoffrey Galt Harpham (Contributions by), Valrie Loichot (Contributions by), Antonia Dominiguez Miguela (Contributions by), Elaine Pigeon (Contributions by), Kathryn Reisdorfer (Contributions by), Roger Sale (Contributions by), Kerstin W. Shands (Contributions by), Linda Simon (Contributions by), Susan Varney (Contributions by)
Language: English
Publisher: Lexington Books

Legacies, Genealogies, and Explorations of Fatherhood in Modern and Contemporary Literature
This is a collection of essays on the subject of fatherhood: its enduring power, its secret ruses, and unsettling provocations.
Naming the Father is a collection of essays on the subject of fatherhood: its enduring power, its secret ruses, its unsettling provocations. Despite the considerable critical attention devoted to motherhood in literature-and despite the late-twentieth-century focus on patriarchy-there is surprisingly no comparable collection on fatherhood. This volume was born of the conclusion that critics of modern and contemporary literature may comprehend the father too little for presuming to have comprehended patriarchy so much. Naming the Father begins with a series of nonfiction essays that attempts to locate the missing father in the individual experiences of three scholars at various stages of their careers. The following thematically grouped sections recover and discuss fatherhood in fields ranging from Caribbean fiction to African American drama and in the work of authors as diverse as Rebecca West, Anzia Yezierska, William Burroughs, and Stephen Wright, as well as Henry James and James Joyce. A variety of critical approaches, from biographical to deconstructive, activate and engage with the cultural, national, and global implications of fatherhood for the family and for the future of literary studies. Scholars and students of contemporary literature, cultural studies, and gender studies will find this book a fascinating and invaluable collection.