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E-grāmata: Routledge Handbook of Literature and Space

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The "spatial turn" in literary studies is transforming the way we think of the field. The Routledge Handbook of Literature and Space maps the key areas of spatiality within literary studies, offering a comprehensive overview but also pointing towards new and exciting directions of study. The interdisciplinary and global approach provides a thorough introduction and includes thirty-two essays on topics such as:











Spatial theory and practice





Critical methodologies





Work sites





Cities and the geography of urban experience





Maps, territories, readings.

The contributors to this volume demonstrate how a variety of romantic, realist, modernist, and postmodernist narratives represent the changing social spaces of their world, and of our own world system today.
List of contributors
xi
Acknowledgements xvi
Introduction: the reassertion of space in literary studies 1(6)
Robert T. Tally Jr.
PART I Spatial theory and practice
7(76)
1 In, of, out, with, and through: new perspectives in literary geography
9(19)
Marc Brosseau
2 Critical literary geography
28(11)
Andrew Thacker
3 Senses of place
39(11)
Neal Alexander
4 Inventions of space: Deleuze between concept and event
50(10)
Tom Conley
5 Phenomenology, place, and the spatial turn
60(10)
Eric Prieto
6 Spatializing practices at the intersections: representations and productions of spaces
70(13)
Gerhard van den Heever
PART II Critical methodologies
83(74)
7 Literary geography and the digital: the emergence of neogeography
85(10)
Peta Mitchell
8 Reading as mapping
95(11)
Christina Ljungberg
9 Sound and rhythm in literary space-time
106(8)
Sheila Hones
10 Elizabeth Bishop in and out of Place: a topopoetic approach
114(11)
Tim Cresswell
11 Literature across scales
125(10)
Hsuan L. Hsu
12 Digital literary cartographies: mapping British Romanticism
135(13)
David Cooper
13 Literature and land surveying
148(9)
Sarah Luria
PART III Worksites
157(74)
14 Atopia/non-place
159(9)
Siobhan Carroll
15 Heterotopias: the possible and real in Foucault, Beckett, and Calvino
168(11)
Amanda Dennis
16 Dreams, memories, longings: the dimension of projected places in fiction
179(8)
Barbara Piatti
17 Imaginative regions
187(8)
Juha Ridanpaa
18 Neighbourhoods: thick description in the city
195(9)
Julie Sanders
19 Islands: literary geographies of possession, separation, and transformation
204(10)
James Kneale
20 Island spatialities
214(17)
Johannes Riquet
PART IV Cities and the geography of urban experience
231(58)
21 The city novel: measuring referential, spatial, linguistic, and temporal distances
233(9)
Lieven Ameel
22 From the city of London to the desert island: Defoe and the writing of space and place
242(9)
Emmanuelle Peraldo
23 The speculative fictional mapping of literary Johannesburg's spaces in Beukes's Zoo City and Grey's The Mall
251(10)
Irikidzayi Manase
24 Spaces of Difference in Subterranean Toronto
261(12)
Amy Lavender Harris
25 On this spot: materialism, memory, and the politics of absence in Greenwich Village
273(7)
Elayne Tobin
26 The following is an account of what happened: plot, space, and the art of shadowing
280(9)
Jean-Francois Duclos
PART V Maps, territories, readings
289(72)
27 From the spatial turn to the spacetime-vitalist turn: Mahjoub's Navigation of a Rainmaker and Owuor's Dust
291(12)
Russell West-Pavlov
28 Environmental determinism and American literature: historicizing geography and form
303(11)
Rebecca Walsh
29 Mapping without maps: memory and cartography in Las Casas's Very Brief Account of the Destruction of the Indies
314(9)
Ricardo Padron
30 Joycean chronotopography: Homer, Dante, Ulysses
323(14)
Charles Travis
31 Intellectual cartographies of the Cold War: Latin American visitors to the People's Republic of China, 1952--1958
337(12)
Rosario Hubert
32 Feminist geocritical activism: Natalie Barney's writing of women's spaces into women's places
349(12)
Amy D. Wells
Index 361
Robert T. Tally Jr. is Associate Professor of English at Texas State University, USA.