Synopses & Reviews
Andrea Levy has emerged as one of the most significant and popular voices in contemporary black British writing both in the UK and abroad. Drawing on a familial history of emigration, her critically-acclaimed novels - including the multiple award-winning Small Island - attempt to bring a variety of voices to the representation of black experience in post-war Britain.
This book is the first of its kind to be devoted to Levys work. Combining historical, theoretical and textual perspectives, the volume hosts a wide range of current critical approaches to Levys fiction. With chapters written by leading established and emerging scholars, the book explores issues of literary form, diasporic literature and cultural value, the BBC TV adaptation of Small Island, while also shedding fresh light on Levys critically neglected early works. The book also includes a new interview with Levy herself, a timeline of her life, chapter summaries, as well as guides to further reading and online resources, making this an essential companion to the writings of one of the most exciting voices in contemporary fiction.
About the Author
Jeannette Baxter, Senior Lecturer in English Literature, Anglia Ruskin University, UK. She is the author of J. G. Ballards Surrealist Imagination, and her recent co-edited collections include J. G. Ballard: Visions and Revisions (2012) and A Literature of Restitution: Critical Essays on W. G. Sebald (2013).
David James, Lecturer in Modern and Contemporary Literature, Queen Mary, University of London, UK. Editor of several collections, including The Legacies of Modernism (2011), he is author of Contemporary British Fiction and the Artistry of Space (2008) and Modernist Futures (2012).
Table of Contents
Contributors
Foreword by Lawrence Scott
Series Editors Preface
Acknowledgements
Chronology of Andrea Levys Life
INTRODUCTION
‘Towards Serious Work
Jeannette Baxter (Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge) and David James (Queen Mary University, London)
CHAPTER ONE
Unhappy Bildungsromane
Dave Gunning (University of Birmingham)
CHAPTER TWO
Council Housing and the Politics of the Welfare State in Never Far From
Matthew Taunton (University of East Anglia)
CHAPTER THREE
Existing in More than One Plane of Time: Memory and Narrative Form in Every Light in the House Michael Perfect (University of Cambridge)
CHAPTER FOUR
The Immediacy of Small Island
David James (Queen Mary University, London)
CHAPTER FIVE
Small Island, Small Screen: Adapting Black British
Rachel Carroll (University of Teeside)
CHAPTER SIX
Exquisite Corpse: Un/dressing History in Fruit of the Lemon/The Long Song
Jeannette Baxter (Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge)
CHAPTER SEVEN
‘I am the narrator of this work: Narrative Authority in Andrea Levys The Long
Fiona Tolan (Liverpool John Moores University)
CHAPTER EIGHT
At the Centre of the Picture: Andrea Levys The Long
Susan Alice Fischer (City University of New York)
‘Andrea Levy in Conversation with Susan Alice Fischer
References
Index