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Image courtesy of publisher's website.
Issue Details: First known date: 2021... 2021 The Planetary Clock Antipodean : Time and Spherical Postmodern Fictions
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'The theme of The Planetary Clock is the representation of time in postmodern culture and the way temporality as a global phenomenon manifests itself differently across an antipodean axis. To trace postmodernism in an expansive spatial and temporal arc, from its formal experimentation in the 1960s to environmental concerns in the twenty-first century, is to describe a richer and more complex version of this cultural phenomenon. Exploring different scales of time from a Southern Hemisphere perspective, with a special emphasis on issues of Indigeneity and the Anthropocene, The Planetary Clock offers a wide-ranging, revisionist account of postmodernism, reinterpreting literature, film, music, and visual art of the post-1960 period within a planetary framework.

'By bringing the culture of Australia and New Zealand into dialogue with other Western narratives, it suggests how an antipodean impulse, involving the transposition of the world into different spatial and temporal dimensions, has long been an integral (if generally occluded) aspect of postmodernism. Taking its title from a Florentine clock designed in 1510 to measure worldly time alongside the rotation of the planets, The Planetary Clock ranges across well-known American postmodernists (John Barth, Toni Morrison) to more recent science fiction writers (Octavia Butler, Richard Powers), while bringing the US tradition into juxtaposition with both its English (Philip Larkin, Ian McEwan) and Australian (Les Murray, Alexis Wright) counterparts. By aligning cultural postmodernism with music (Messiaen, Ligeti, Birtwistle), the visual arts (Hockney, Blackman, Fiona Hall), and cinema (Rohmer, Haneke, Tarantino), this volume enlarges our understanding of global postmodernism for the twenty-first century.' (Publication summary)

Notes

  • Table of Contents

    Introduction: Antipodean Time and the Anthropocenic Imaginary
    1:Répétition Planétaire: Upside Down Postmodernism
    2:Antipodean Alice: Cold War Fetishism and Frozen Time
    3:Queer Poetic Time: Crosstemporal Parataxis and Disjunctions of Scale
    4:"Reverse-Thinking": Metahistorical Arts and Fictions
    5:Two-way Time Travel: Recursive Science and "Backward-Flowing" Fiction
    6:Postmodern Slave Narratives: Anachronism and Disorientation
    7:Reorchestrating the Past: Long Songs and Antipodean Relations
    Conclusion: The Long Postmodernism

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • Oxford, Oxfordshire,
      c
      England,
      c
      c
      United Kingdom (UK),
      c
      Western Europe, Europe,
      :
      Oxford University Press ,
      2021 .
      image of person or book cover 4554346268698119782.jpg
      Image courtesy of publisher's website.
      Extent: 448p.
      Description: illus.
      Note/s:
      • Published: 23 February 2021
      ISBN: 9780198857723

Works about this Work

Paul Giles, The Planetary Clock: Antipodean Time and Spherical Postmodern Fictions Nicholas Birns , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: JASAL , 20 December vol. 24 no. 1 2024;

— Review of The Planetary Clock Antipodean : Time and Spherical Postmodern Fictions Paul Giles , 2021 multi chapter work criticism
'Paul Giles has had an incredibly prolific and successful career as a literary academic. As an Americanist, he has reminded the institution of American literature precisely what it has neglected because of the American system—namely its transatlantic connections, and, more recently, after moving to the University of Sydney, he has also reminded it of its transpacific connections. He has explored these areas in a prolific, comprehensive, and learned series of books. These books are remarkable, not just for kicking on so much but being so scrupulous, getting the details right, being so well written, and being very generous in their citations of specialists who have worked in a far narrower field than Giles has, but whose critical explorations have provided the foundations for synthesis such as the ones he has undertaken. Giles’s achievement is a lesson to the critic that one can be ambitious without being sloppy, and that one can be conceptually daring yet still explore concrete ways, archives, publishing, history, and the nooks and crannies of critical reception. For all the heady originality of the book’s sweeping argument, the text is always kept on an argumentative throughline, and potential tensions all make sense within the book’s determinate frame.' (Introduction)
Paul Giles, The Planetary Clock: Antipodean Time and Spherical Postmodern Fictions Nicholas Birns , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: JASAL , 20 December vol. 24 no. 1 2024;

— Review of The Planetary Clock Antipodean : Time and Spherical Postmodern Fictions Paul Giles , 2021 multi chapter work criticism
'Paul Giles has had an incredibly prolific and successful career as a literary academic. As an Americanist, he has reminded the institution of American literature precisely what it has neglected because of the American system—namely its transatlantic connections, and, more recently, after moving to the University of Sydney, he has also reminded it of its transpacific connections. He has explored these areas in a prolific, comprehensive, and learned series of books. These books are remarkable, not just for kicking on so much but being so scrupulous, getting the details right, being so well written, and being very generous in their citations of specialists who have worked in a far narrower field than Giles has, but whose critical explorations have provided the foundations for synthesis such as the ones he has undertaken. Giles’s achievement is a lesson to the critic that one can be ambitious without being sloppy, and that one can be conceptually daring yet still explore concrete ways, archives, publishing, history, and the nooks and crannies of critical reception. For all the heady originality of the book’s sweeping argument, the text is always kept on an argumentative throughline, and potential tensions all make sense within the book’s determinate frame.' (Introduction)
Last amended 6 Jul 2021 13:24:31
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