The Shape of the Fantastic: Selected Essays from the Seventh International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts

Front Cover
Olena H. Saciuk
Bloomsbury Academic, Jan 25, 1990 - Literary Criticism - 270 pages

Grotesques, angels, Beast-Man, and the Medusa are among the marvelous cast of characters analyzed in this volume. Originally presented at the 7th International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts held in 1986, these essays are stimulating responses by scholars to a range of creative works by Mark Strand, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Kafka, Tolkein, Henry James, Julio Cortazar, Sherwood Anderson, Ursula Le Guin, I.B. Singer, Joyce, and others. Examining both mainstream and fantasy literature from many nations, the authors zero-in on the myriad shapes of the fantastic and study the world of SF and film. Five sections treat the fantastic from various enlightening perspectives and seven figures illustrate the essays' provocative theses.

In Part I, Discovery and Interpretation, five authors sleuth out surprising elements of fantasy in poetry, short fiction, and a neo-Romantic fairy tale. Also in Part I, an inquiry is made of fantasy in the post-modernist movement. The Inexplicable Reality of Part II refers to deaths that are anything but terminal and four essays chronicle fantastic occurrences whose scientific rationale is tenuous at best. The fifth article traces the elusiveness of fantasy in a number of authors and works. Beast-Man, angels, the Medusa, and other Marvelous Beings are the subject of six essays in Part III. In Part IV, Fantasy in Symbiosis with other Forms, six essays consider the combination of fantasy with murder mystery, with taoism, with the symbolism of the tarot, with Freudian dreams, and with other genres. In the final section, From Fantasy to Science Fiction: Critical Considerations, essays address fantasy and Science Fiction in film, present a discussion between 2 critics of science fiction, and view the history and development of the contemporary SF novel. Series Editor Marshall B. Tymn's selected bibliography of criticism on the fantastic supplements the bibliographies that follow each essay and completes this remarkable work: fascinating reading for generalists; a necessity for students and scholars, aestheticians and critics of the fantasy and SF genres in literature, film, and art.

From inside the book

Contents

Fantasy as Criticism in Forsters Short Fiction
9
Tolkien Crowley and Postmodernism
21
Hawthornes
33
Copyright

23 other sections not shown

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1990)

OLENA H. SACIUK born in the Ukraine, received her Ph.D., in comparative literature, from the University of Illinois at Urbana. She is a professor of literature and rhetoric at Inter American University of Puerto Rico. She has presented numerous papers on American, Latin American, and Ukrainian literatures, and also enjoys giving workshops on heuristics in rhetoric. Aside from articles, this is a second book that she has edited. Her composition textbook, Bridges to Writing, is forthcoming from Inter American University Press. Lately, she has tried to combine her interest in science fiction with the study of the three national literatures.

Bibliographic information