Book contents
- The Cambridge Companion to British Fiction: 1980–2018
- The Cambridge Companion to
- The Cambridge Companion to British Fiction: 1980–2018
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contributors
- Chronology
- Introduction: Framing the Present
- Part I Overview
- Part II New Formations
- Part III Genres and Movements
- 7 Late Modernism, Postmodernism and After
- 8 Experiment and the Genre Novel
- 9 Transgression and Experimentation
- 10 Fiction and Film, 1980–2018
- Part IV Contexts
- Conclusion
- Further Reading
- Index
- Cambridge Companions to …
8 - Experiment and the Genre Novel
British Fiction, 1980–2018
from Part III - Genres and Movements
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 June 2019
- The Cambridge Companion to British Fiction: 1980–2018
- The Cambridge Companion to
- The Cambridge Companion to British Fiction: 1980–2018
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contributors
- Chronology
- Introduction: Framing the Present
- Part I Overview
- Part II New Formations
- Part III Genres and Movements
- 7 Late Modernism, Postmodernism and After
- 8 Experiment and the Genre Novel
- 9 Transgression and Experimentation
- 10 Fiction and Film, 1980–2018
- Part IV Contexts
- Conclusion
- Further Reading
- Index
- Cambridge Companions to …
Summary
In a widely cited 2008 review entitled ‘Two Paths for the Novel’, Zadie Smith tackled the perennial question of the death of the Anglophone novel as a viable literary form for articulating contemporary experience. Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland (2008) and Tom McCarthy’s Remainder (2005), Smith wrote, represent divergent trajectories for novelistic style in the twenty-first century. On the one hand, O’Neill’s complacent lyrical realism in the tradition of Balzac and Flaubert perpetuates the foundational myth that ‘the self is a bottomless pool’ and wields this anachronism into a new era of ontological and technological entanglement. On the other, McCarthy’s deconstructive ‘anti-novel’ unceremoniously dismantles bourgeois depth psychology to reveal the chaos beneath – that indivisible remainder, which cannot be processed or made to cohere. Smith’s critique draws sustenance from the opposition in theories of the novel between realism and experimentation: a dichotomy that, as Dominic Head notes, has unhelpfully persisted in British literary criticism. The drawing-up of boundaries in the post-war period between writers like Kingsley Amis and Margaret Drabble on the side of realism, and figures such as B. S. Johnson and Christine Brooke-Rose on the side of experimentation, has thus simplified novelistic practices that might more productively be read as occupying some messy middle ground.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to British Fiction: 1980–2018 , pp. 150 - 168Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019