Unexpected Pleasures

Unexpected Pleasures Parody, Queerness, and Genre in 20Th-Century British Fiction - Clemson University Press W/ LUP

Paperback (28 Jan 2025)

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Publisher's Synopsis

What are the sources-and the effects-of the pleasurable feeling of power that genre gives us? What happens to that power when conventionality tips into parody? In this book, Lauryl Tucker explores the connection between genre parody and queerness in twentieth-century British fiction. Teasing out the parodic sensibility of writers including Virginia Woolf, Elizabeth Bowen, Sam Selvon, Dorothy Sayers, Stella Gibbons, and Zadie Smith, Unexpected Pleasures offers an innovative reading of works that seem to excessively obey the rules of genre. By oversupplying the pleasurable sense of knowledge and the illusion of predictive power that genre confers, these works play with readerly expectation in order to expose and queer a broader set of assumptions
about desire, resolution, and futurity. Unexpected Pleasures expands on a burgeoning critical interest in genre as an interpretive tool, and further diversifies the archive and methodology of queer critique. Gathering a surprising group of writers together, it reveals new throughlines between middlebrow and highbrow, and among modernist, mid-century, and contemporary literature. This book will interest scholars of
modernist and contemporary British literature, as well as readers interested in narrative and queer theory.

Book information

ISBN: 9781835538807
Publisher: Clemson University Press w/ LUP
Imprint: Clemson University Press
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 282
Weight: -1g
Height: 234mm