Art and Idea in the Novels of China Miéville
Carl Freedman
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Product details
07 Sep 2015ISBN 9781780240305 (Paperback)
194 pp., Free UK Shipping
About
This book offers (in the first six chapters) critical readings of six novels by China Miéville, which are followed (in the seventh chapter) by a theoretical meditation on some of the conceptual issues raised by and engaged in the Miéville oeuvre.
Reviews
There comes a moment in The City & the City, though it is not necessarily the same moment for every reader, when you realise that Beszel and Ul Qoma are not separate realms but the same space divided. Likewise, art and idea are often subject to absurd partition, but then along comes an author such as China Miéville who shows them to be, in truth, indissoluble. So argues Freedman's inordinately readable and just as rigorous account of Miéville's major novels. Highly recommended. (Mark Bould, University of the West of England)
Freedman offers a compelling interpretation of Miéville's novels informed equally by an impressive range of literary influences and a carefully documented exploration of historical antecedents. Seeing Miéville's genre hybridity as an illustration of the power of dialectical thinking, Freedman illuminates the complex utopian project of Miéville's fiction. Freedman is one of our finest critical voices on Miéville, one of the most important speculative writers of the 21st century. (Sherryl Vint, University of California, Riverside)
Contents
Preface (p. ix)
Acknowledgements (p. xiii)
I King Rat; or, Towards a Marxist Urban Sublime (p. 1)
II Establishing Bas-Lag in Perdido Street Station: Peaceful Love, Capitalist Monsters, and Dialectical Hybridity Against Postmodern Pastiche (p. 19)
III The Scar, Pirates, and the Pressures of Imperialist Power (p. 43)
IV The Representation of Revolution in Iron Council (p. 65)
V From Genre to Political Economy: The City & The City and Uneven Development (p. 85)
VI Embassytown; or, Between Language and Language (p. 105)
VII The Dialectic of Art and Idea (p. 127)
1 Didactics (p. 127)
2 Estrangement, Cognition, and History (p. 138)
3 International Law, Capitalism and Remaking (p. 154)
Notes (p. 163)
Index (p. 177)