Synopses & Reviews
"Tanner deals with the central question of all narrative texts: how the reader is manipulated into empathy or distance by the text.... This study... is the sort that needs to be redone in every classroom and by every mature reader.... Tanner offers provocative and useful discussions of rape and torture... " --Choice
"This thoughtful and disturbing book raises serious questions about 'the consequences... of reading representations of rape and torture.' " --American Literature
"In this incisive exploration of twentieth-century novels, art, and ads, Laura Tanner explains the mechanisms by which reader and viewer are implicated in violence. Equally effective as a challenge to textual assault is the grace and gentleness of Tanner's own prose. Intimate Violence signals the emergence of an astute and humane critical voice." --Wendy Steiner
Through an examination of such notorious works as The White Hotel and American Psycho, Laura Tanner leads us in a disturbing exploration of the reader's complicity with fictional depictions of intimate violence.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [149]-152) and index.
About the Author
LAURA E. TANNER is Assistant Professor of English at Boston College.
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Reading Rape
Sanctuary and the Women of Brewster Place
2. Reading Torture
1984 and Amnesty International
3. Sweet Pain and Charred Bodies
Figuring Violence in The White Hotel
4. Envisioning Violence
Seeing/Selling the Body in Last Exit to Brooklyn
5. American Psycho and the American Psyche
Reading the Forbidden Text
6. "Known in the Brain and Known in the Flesh"
Gender, Race, and the Vulnerable Body in Tracks
Notes
Works Cited
Index