y separately published work icon Studies in the Novel periodical issue  
Alternative title: Special Issue: The Rising Tide of Climate Change Fiction
Issue Details: First known date: 2018... vol. 50 no. 1 Spring 2018 of Studies in the Novel Studies in the Novel
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2018 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
The Rest Is Silence : Postmodern and Postcolonial Possibilities in Climate Change Fiction, Adeline Johns-Putra , single work criticism

'In this essay, I consider postmodernist tendencies in two recent climate change novels, Alexis Wright’s The Swan Book (2013) and Chang-rae Lee’s On Such a Full Sea (2014). While I hesitate to claim that these herald a distinct postmodern turn in climate change fiction, I argue that these novels’ postmodernist self-awareness constitutes a promising new direction for fiction in the Anthropocene. Displaying a postcolonial awareness and deploying the postmodernist strategies of metafiction and magical realism, the novels undermine the omniscience of third-person narrators and the reliability of focalizers in order simultaneously to destabilize realist, imperialist, and anthropocentric constructions of the world. Indeed, they not only question the dominance of master-narratives; they question domination per se. That is, in these novels, voice itself comes under suspicion as an anthropocentric fallacy.'  (Publication abstract)

(p. 26-42)
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