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Marilynne Robinson

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Marilynne Robinson features 16 new and exciting essays on the noted American author, the historical settings of her novels, and the contemporary themes of her fiction and nonfiction.
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  • 30 March 2022
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Best known for a trilogy of historical novels set in the fictional town of Gilead, Iowa, Marilynne Robinson is a prolific writer, teacher, and public speaker, who has won the Pulitzer Prize and was awarded the National Humanities Medal by Barack Obama. This collection intervenes in Robinson’s growing critical reputation, pointing to new and exciting links between the author, the historical settings of her novels, and the contemporary themes of her fictional, educational, and theoretical work. Introduced by a critical discussion from Professors Bridget Bennett, Sarah Churchwell, and Richard King, Marilynne Robinson features analysis from a range of international academics, and explores debates in race, gender, environment, critical theory, and more, to suggest new and innovative readings of her work.
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Price: £90.00
Pages: 320
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Contemporary American and Canadian Writers
Publication Date: 30 March 2022
ISBN: 9781526134653
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

LITERARY CRITICISM / General, Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers, LITERARY CRITICISM / Modern / 20th Century, LITERARY CRITICISM / American / General, Literary studies: from c 2000, Literature: history and criticism

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Introduction – Rachel Sykes, Jennifer Daly, and Anna Maguire Elliott
Robinson in context: A critical discussion – Sarah Churchwell, Richard H. King, Bridget Bennett

Writing, form, and style
1 ‘It might be better to burn them’: Archive fever and the Gilead novels of Marilynne Robinson – Daniel King
2 ‘One day she would tell him what she knew’: Disturbance of the epistemological conventions of the marriage plot in Lila – Maria Elena Carpintero Torres-Quevedo
3 Robinson’s triumphs of style – Jack Baker

Gender and environment
4 The female orphan and an ecofeminist ethic-of-care in Marilynne Robinson’s Housekeeping and Lila – Anna Maguire Elliott
5 Souls all unaccompanied: Enacting feminine alterity in Marilynne Robinson’s Housekeeping – Makayla Steiner
6 The domestic geographies of grief: Bereavement, time and home spaces in Marilynne Robinson’s Housekeeping and Home – Lucy Clarke

Imagined histories: Race, religion, and rights
7 Domesticating political feeling, affect and memory in Marilynne Robinson’s Home – Christopher Lloyd
8 ‘Onward Christian liberals’: Marilynne Robinson’s essays and the crisis of mainline Protestantism – Alexander Engebretson
9 Presence in absence: The spectre of race in Gilead and Home – Emily Hammerton-Barry

Robinson and her contemporaries
10 ‘Everything can change’: Civil rights, civil war and radical transformation in Home and Gilead – Tessa Roynon
11 ‘A great admirer of American education’: Robinson as professor and defender of ‘America’s best idea’ – Steve Gronert Ellerhoff and Kathryn E. Engebretson
12 Acknowledging a numinous ordinary: Marilynne Robinson and Stanley Cavell – Paul Jenner

Epilogue – ‘A little different every time’: Accumulation and repetition in Jack – Rachel Sykes