scholarly journals THE EXPERIMENTAL NOVEL «F. M» BY B. AKUNIN: GENRE FEATURES

Author(s):  
Олександр ГАЛИЧ
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 49-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Anthony Neal

Abstract The essay explores how the invisibility and trauma of Black women are negotiated in Black sonic culture, utilizing Ricardo Cortez Cruz's experimental novel Five Days of Bleeding (1995), in which the primary female character, Zu-Zu, speaks (and sings) primarily using obscure song lyrics and titles, largely drawn from an archive of Black women's performance.


SURG Journal ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-43
Author(s):  
Pascale Rabideau

In 1880, Emile Zola (1840-1902) wrote Le Roman Expérimental. He believed that with the application of the scientific method, fictional novel writing could be a scientific field used to study human passions and psychology. Zola claims to take his method and arguments directly from French physiologist Claude Bernard’s (1813-1878) Introduction à la l’étude de médecine expérimentale (1865). But did Zola really understand Bernard’s experimental method? Comparing the experimental method outlined in Zola’s essay and Bernard’s book, it becomes apparent that although Zola understood the steps involved in Bernard’s method, his application of it to literature is flawed. He takes quotations out of context, he assigns contradictory values to the scientific validity of the experimental novel, and most fatally, Zola’s version of an experiment comes nowhere close to being what Bernard would consider a true scientific experiment.


Slavic Review ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 284-307
Author(s):  
Olga Matich

The article examines the aversive emotion of disgust and its deployment in the visual arts and in the premier Russian modernist novel, Andrei Belyi's Petersburg, which has not been considered in regard to its affective poetics before. Based on recent studies of the emotions in cultural history and theory, it explores the philosophical, psychological, and aesthetic aspects of disgust as a response to something viscerally and/or morally repugnant. The emotion, induced by the experience seen or imagined close up, provokes the observer's recoil as defined by cultural norms. As such, disgust is performative in spatial terms. Olga Matich argues that movement away from the loathsome image or idea affords the possibility of making the experience cognitively readable or legible, that disgust creates a space in which the individual negotiates her emotional as well as moral response. Yet she claims that aesthetically—and in certain instances ethically—disgust, which is always about the boundaries of the permissible, is also liberating: it offers society, its artists, and their consumers the opportunity to transgress established norms. Through extensive close readings of Petersburg, Matich shows that Belyi's experimental novel does precisely that, challenging the reader not to avert her readerly gaze from that which is unsettling and to appreciate, even to delight in, his shocking metamorphic image-making. She calls Petersburg a modernist exemplar of baroque aesthetics, characterized by excessive affect and grotesque representation, especially of the corpse, invoking the transience of life and dissolution of form.


Author(s):  
Carrie D. Shanafelt

Carrie D Shanafelt’s “The ‘Plexed Artistry’ of Nabokov and Johnson” notes how in the 1962 experimental novel Pale Fire, Vladimir Nabokov invokes Samuel Johnson as the prototype for the poet John Shade. Shade is described as a rather old-fashioned but brilliant poet whose last poem interrogates his own subjective experience of meaning-making in a world that stubbornly refuses either to make sense or to be meaningless altogether. Nabokov’s affinity for Samuel Johnson, Shanafelt argues, operates in important ways as a recognition of the latter’s similar aesthetic resistance to the dominant secular empiricist models of linguistic meaning of his time. Exploring their epistemological contexts as well as literary productions, her chapter delineates parallels between Johnson and Nabokov with respect to their similar investment in the aesthetics of desire and trauma in relation to linguistic meaning.


Author(s):  
Gwyneth Jones

Joanna Russ (1937-2011) was an outstanding writer, critic, and theorist of science fiction at a time when female writers were marginal to the genre, and very few women, perhaps only Judith Merril and Joanna herself, had significant influence on the field. In her university teaching and in her writing she championed the integration of new social models and higher literary standards into genre works. In her review columns for the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction she dissected the masters of the New Wave with appreciation, wit, and incisive intelligence. Her experimental novel The Female Man (1975) is an essential seventies Feminist text, still relevant today; her groundbreaking academic articles are recognized as foundation studies in feminist and science fiction literary scholarship. Drawing on Jeanne Cortiel’s lesbian feminist appraisal of Russ, Demand My Writing (1999), Farah Mendelsohn’s essay collection On Joanna Russ (2009), and a wide range of contemporary sources, this book aims to give context to her career in the America of her times, from the Cold War domestic revival through the 1960s decade of protest and the Second Wave feminism of the 1970s and 1980s, into the twenty-first century, examining her novels, her remarkable short fiction, her critical and autobiographical works, her role in the science fiction community, and her contributions to feminist debate.


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