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John Banville’s Novels of the Early Twenties: Terminations and Turns
by
Puschmann-Nalenz, Barbara
in
Aesthetics
/ Banville, John (1945- )
/ British & Irish literature
/ British Literature
/ Child abuse & neglect
/ Corruption in government
/ Crime fiction
/ historical crime fiction
/ Historical fiction
/ hybridity
/ Identity
/ Irish history
/ Language and Literature Studies
/ Literary characters
/ Literary history
/ Narratives
/ Novels
/ Onomastics
/ Postmodernism
/ Realism
/ referentiality
/ Reflexivity
/ Self concept
/ Studies of Literature
/ Topics
/ Traditions
/ Writers
2024
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John Banville’s Novels of the Early Twenties: Terminations and Turns
by
Puschmann-Nalenz, Barbara
in
Aesthetics
/ Banville, John (1945- )
/ British & Irish literature
/ British Literature
/ Child abuse & neglect
/ Corruption in government
/ Crime fiction
/ historical crime fiction
/ Historical fiction
/ hybridity
/ Identity
/ Irish history
/ Language and Literature Studies
/ Literary characters
/ Literary history
/ Narratives
/ Novels
/ Onomastics
/ Postmodernism
/ Realism
/ referentiality
/ Reflexivity
/ Self concept
/ Studies of Literature
/ Topics
/ Traditions
/ Writers
2024
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John Banville’s Novels of the Early Twenties: Terminations and Turns
by
Puschmann-Nalenz, Barbara
in
Aesthetics
/ Banville, John (1945- )
/ British & Irish literature
/ British Literature
/ Child abuse & neglect
/ Corruption in government
/ Crime fiction
/ historical crime fiction
/ Historical fiction
/ hybridity
/ Identity
/ Irish history
/ Language and Literature Studies
/ Literary characters
/ Literary history
/ Narratives
/ Novels
/ Onomastics
/ Postmodernism
/ Realism
/ referentiality
/ Reflexivity
/ Self concept
/ Studies of Literature
/ Topics
/ Traditions
/ Writers
2024
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John Banville’s Novels of the Early Twenties: Terminations and Turns
Journal Article
John Banville’s Novels of the Early Twenties: Terminations and Turns
2024
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Overview
The article starts from the observation that Irish fiction has recently shown a diversification, which can be summarised as follows: on the one hand there are works addressing the history of Ireland, on the other hand we see novels focusing on post-national topics (cf. Haekel). John Banville, who under the pseudonym of Benjamin Black also wrote crime novels, is a renowned representative of narrative fiction informed by contemporary philosophy and aesthetics, exploring questions such as memory, cognition, and personal identity. My article reveals how in his latest (and allegedly last) literary novel The Singularities (2022) his highly sophisticated character narration reaches a terminal point, as self-reflexivity, textual referentiality, and abstraction become unsettling.
However, the complexity of placing his work in literary history has intensified by the appearance of three more novels published between 2020 and 2023 under Banville’s own name despite the supposed finality of The Singularities. Surprisingly, Snow (2020), April in Spain (2021) and The Lock-Up (2023) revisit dismal topics from Irish national history. These thematically (trans)national fictions also enhance the propositions of realism in Banville’s work. They present another hybrid form of narrative genres, blending crime fiction and historical novel, infused with philosophical reflection. The writer evades a categorisation. With The Singularities, Banville wishes to take his departure from the philosophical novel, as it seems with the intention to continue writing his new kind of murder mystery. The Lock-Up will be followed by another crime novel in October 2024.
The Singularities, I wish to show in my analysis, points at the exhaustion due to a self-reflexive probing of the subject, the unreliability of knowledge, and the impossibility of truthful representation. Reality appears gloomy, yet in the end art surfaces as a source of freedom and imaginativeness for the individual and prospering kinds of fellowship.
Publisher
Stowarzyszenie Nauczycieli Akademickich Języka Angielskiego PASE,Polish Association for the Study of English PASE,The Polish Association for the Study of English,Polish Association for the Study of English
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