Description
Explores the changing relationship of fiction to truth, politics, and ethics by picking through the bones of postmodernism and by looking at the state of metafiction today (in novels, films, and television series).
About the Author
Josh Toth is Associate Professor of English at MacEwan University, Canada. He is author of Stranger America: A Narrative Ethics of Exclusion (2018) and The Passing of Postmodernism: A Spectroanalysis of the Contemporary (2010).
Reviews
Bringing out the heavy philosophical artillery of the 21st-century 'return to Hegel,' Toth makes a very strong case for recuperating metafiction in the era since postmodernism. Deeply thoughtful and thought-provoking, Toth's book is bound to shift the current scholarly discussion about metafictional narrative. * Brian McHale, Arts and Humanities Distinguished Professor, Department of English, The Ohio State University, USA *
Building on his influential work on postmodernism, Josh Toth takes up in his new and trailblazing monograph the intricate and timely issue of metafiction and its proliferation after the postmodern heyday, making a compelling case for postmodernism's complex transformation in today's U. S. metafictional prose and cinema. Thoroughly researched, impeccably argued, and superbly written, Truth and Metafiction is and will remain for years to come required reading for anyone interested in why and how formally and thematically self-aware fiction and film ultimately, if tentatively, do give us access to the world's concreteness, affective substance, authenticity, and truth. * Christian Moraru, Class of 1949 Distinguished Professor in the Humanities and Professor of American Literature and Critical Theory, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, USA, and author of Cosmodernism: American Narrative, Late Globalization, and the New Cultural Imaginary *
Truth and Metafiction confirms Toth as one of the most insightful and ambitious readers of contemporary fiction, film, and philosophy. As an account of what has happened to American literature and cinema in the post-Truth era, and how a rediscovery of Hegel might save us from our skepticism, this formulation of "historioplastic metafiction" is astute and compelling. * David Rudrum, Senior Lecturer, University of Huddersfield, UK, and author of Supplanting the Postmodern (Bloomsbury, 2015) *
Book Information
ISBN 9781501351730
Author Professor or Dr. Josh Toth
Format Paperback
Page Count 264
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic USA
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Weight(grams) 322g