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Romances of the Archive in Contemporary British Fiction

Suzanne Keen
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TLDR
Keen as mentioned in this paper provides a detailed examination of the range of contemporary "romances of the archive," a genre in which British novelists both deal with the loss of Empire and a nostalgia for the past, and react to the postimperial condition of Great Britain.
Abstract
Romances of the Archive in Contemporary British Fiction is a lively discussion of the debates about the uses of the past contained in British fiction since the Falklands crisis. Drawing on a diverse and original body of work, Suzanne Keen provides a detailed examination of the range of contemporary 'romances of the archive,' a genre in which British novelists both deal with the loss of Empire and a nostalgia for the past, and react to the postimperial condition of Great Britain. Keen identifies the genre and explains its literary sources from Edmund Spenser to H.P. Lovecraft and John LeCarre. She also accounts for the rise in popularity of the archival romance and provides a context for understanding the British postimperial preoccupation with history and heritage. Avoiding a narrow focus on postmodernist fiction alone, Keen treats archival romances from A.S. Byatt's Booker Prize-winning Possession to the paperback thrillers of popular novelists. Using the work of Peter Ackroyd, Julian Barnes, Lindsay Clarke, Stevie Davies, Peter Dickinson, Alan Hollinghurst, P.D. James, Graham Swift, and others, Keen shows how archival romances insist that there is a truth and that it can be found. By characterizing the researcher who investigates, then learns the joys, costs, and consequences of discovery, Romances of the Archive persistently questions the purposes of historical knowledge and the kind of reading that directs the imagination to conceive the past.

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Book

Adaptation and appropriation

Julie Sanders
TL;DR: Adaptation and Appropriation as discussed by the authors explores the cultural and aesthetic politics behind the impulse to adapt, and the impact of new digital technologies on ideas of making, originality and customization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Theories of the Archive from Across the Disciplines

TL;DR: This article provided an exploration and overview of this archival discourse. But their focus was on the function and fate of the historical and scholarly record, not the content of the record itself.

Cruelties incomprehensible: the alienated gaze at war in Pat Barker's Regeneration trilogy

TL;DR: The poignancy of such war novels is greatly diminished if they are understood to represent war as a necessary (as opposed to a sadly inevitable) evil as mentioned in this paper, which is the case of All Quiet on the Western Front from the Regeneration trilogy.
MonographDOI

History and Cultural Memory in Neo-Victorian Fiction

Kate Mitchell
TL;DR: Mitchell as discussed by the authors investigates the way neo-Victorian novels conceptualise our relationship to the Victorian past, and analyzes their role in the production and communication of historical knowledge, and explores their use of the Victorians' own vocabularies of history, memory and loss to re-member the nineteenth century today.
Dissertation

Dragons à vapeur : vers une poétique de la fantasy néo-victorienne contemporaine

TL;DR: Au croisement de la fantasy, ce genre de l’imaginaire qui a recu ses lettres de noblesse avec J.R.R., and des romans neo-victoriens, ces reecritures contemporaines du canon historique and litteraire du XIXe siecle apparues dans les annees 1960, la fantasy neo victorien exhibe ses dragons a vapeur as discussed by the authors.