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Discrepant Solace
Discrepant Solace
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A01=David James
Author_David James
Category=DSBH
Category=DSK
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
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eq_nobargain
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Product details
- ISBN 9780198985914
- Weight: 440g
- Dimensions: 155 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 04 Sep 2025
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
Consolation has always played an uncomfortable part in the literary history of loss. But in recent decades its affective meanings and ethical implications have been recast by narratives that appear at first sight to foil solace altogether. Illuminating this striking archive, Discrepant Solace considers writers who engage with consolation not as an aesthetic salve but as an enduring problematic, one that unravels at the centre of emotionally challenging works of late twentieth- and twenty-first-century fiction and life-writing. The book understands solace as a generative yet conflicted aspect of style, where microelements of diction, rhythm, and syntax capture consolation's alternating desirability and contestation. With a wide-angle lens on the contemporary scene, David James examines writers who are rarely considered in conversation, including Sonali Deraniyagala, Colson Whitehead, Cormac McCarthy, W.G. Sebald, Doris Lessing, Joan Didion, J. M. Coetzee, Marilynne Robinson, Julian Barnes, Helen Macdonald, Ian McEwan, Colm Tóibín, Kazuo Ishiguro, Denise Riley, and David Grossman. These figures overturn critical suppositions about consolation's kinship with ideological complaisance, superficial mitigation, or dubious distraction, producing unsettling perceptions of solace that shape the formal and political contours of their writing.
Through intimate readings of novels and memoirs that explore seemingly indescribable experiences of grief, trauma, remorse, and dread, James demonstrates how they turn consolation into a condition of expressional possibility without ever promising us relief. He also supplies vital traction to current conversations about the stakes of thinking with contemporary writing to scrutinize affirmative structures of feeling, revealing unexpected common ground between the operations of literary consolation and the urgencies of cultural critique. Discrepant Solace makes the close reading of emotion crucial to understanding the work literature does in our precarious present.
David James is Professor of Modern and Contemporary Literature at the University of Birmingham. Among his other books are Sentimental Activism (2026) and Modernist Futures (2012), along with edited volumes such as Modernism and Close Reading (2020), The Cambridge Companion to British Fiction since 1945 (2015), and The Legacies of Modernism (2012). He is an editor at Contemporary Literature and is founding co-editor of the Columbia University Press series Literature Now.
Discrepant Solace
€31.99
