Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions

A special issue of Humanities (ISSN 2076-0787). This special issue belongs to the section "Literature in the Humanities".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 May 2021) | Viewed by 3324

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
School of Humanities, Keele University, Staffordshire ST5 5BG, UK
Interests: contemporary American fiction; gentrification stories; literary depictions of urban neighbourhoods; interactions between local and global identities in changing urban spaces; transnationalism in the music of The Clash; Quakerism and American literature; detective fiction

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

This Special Issue of Humanities calls for papers on twenty-first-century Brooklyn fictions. By “Brooklyn Fictions,” I mean novels and short stories set wholly or partly in New York City’s most populous borough, and ones that explicitly engage with Brooklyn’s neighbourhoods as distinctive communities. Although it has become a commonplace to declare, often ruefully, that “Brooklyn has changed,” the specific texture of those changes is worthy of close consideration. Brooklyn, “a small town in the world city,” has seen virtually all of its diverse neighbourhoods undergo gentrification since the 1960s, and a borough that has in the popular imaginary prided itself on a down-home, neighbourly authenticity at odds with the flinty-eyed aspiration of Manhattan now finds itself almost as expensive and as inaccessible to lower-waged populations as its rival across the water. Contemporary Brooklyn fictions inevitably engage with these economic, social and demographic transformations, and they do so from a wide variety of perspectives, reflecting the diversity that still exists, but is widely perceived as being under threat. Brooklyn has become a test case for literary investigations of, among many other issues: local and global relations, definitions of multiculturalism, class antagonisms, and the commodification of the very idea of neighbourhood.

Topics might include, but are by no means limited to:

  • representations of the lived experience of gentrification
  • the effects of “supergentrification”
  • local and global relations (or “glocalisation,” if you prefer)
  • historical Brooklyn fictions
  • genres of Brooklyn fiction, popular forms (e.g. detective thrillers)
  • mobility, selfhood and place; Brooklyn as a transnational space
  • competing conceptions of “authentic” neighbourhood living

Proposals from postgraduate researchers and early career scholars are warmly welcomed

Abstracts of 150–200 words, along with 150–200-word bios, should be submitted by 31 May 2020. Completed articles of 5000–7000 words should be submitted by 31 December 2020.

Prof. Dr. James Peacock
Guest Editor

Manuscript Submission Information

Manuscripts should be submitted online at www.mdpi.com by registering and logging in to this website. Once you are registered, click here to go to the submission form. Manuscripts can be submitted until the deadline. All submissions that pass pre-check are peer-reviewed. Accepted papers will be published continuously in the journal (as soon as accepted) and will be listed together on the special issue website. Research articles, review articles as well as short communications are invited. For planned papers, a title and short abstract (about 100 words) can be sent to the Editorial Office for announcement on this website.

Submitted manuscripts should not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere (except conference proceedings papers). All manuscripts are thoroughly refereed through a double-blind peer-review process. A guide for authors and other relevant information for submission of manuscripts is available on the Instructions for Authors page. Humanities is an international peer-reviewed open access semimonthly journal published by MDPI.

Please visit the Instructions for Authors page before submitting a manuscript. The Article Processing Charge (APC) for publication in this open access journal is 1400 CHF (Swiss Francs). Submitted papers should be well formatted and use good English. Authors may use MDPI's English editing service prior to publication or during author revisions.

Keywords

  • Brooklyn
  • contemporary fiction
  • gentrification
  • globalization
  • neighbourhood
  • community

Published Papers (1 paper)

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12 pages, 256 KiB  
Article
Brooklyn Gentrification and the Act of Settling in Lionel Shriver’s The Mandibles
by Carl White
Humanities 2021, 10(1), 26; https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/h10010026 - 03 Feb 2021
Viewed by 2420
Abstract
Contemporary Brooklyn fictions, as a genre, are centrally concerned with gentrification and authenticity. This article situates literary Brooklyn and these concerns in relation to the United States at the national level. Thinking about Brooklyn’s gentrification demands one to be necessarily cognizant of the [...] Read more.
Contemporary Brooklyn fictions, as a genre, are centrally concerned with gentrification and authenticity. This article situates literary Brooklyn and these concerns in relation to the United States at the national level. Thinking about Brooklyn’s gentrification demands one to be necessarily cognizant of the borough as a social, cultural, economic, and psychological space within the context of the US as a colonial nation-state. I argue that Lionel Shriver’s The Mandibles (2016), whose titular characters are enactors of both Brooklyn gentrification and a romanticized act of settlement in a fictional new nation-state, exemplifies this link between gentrification at the local level and a search for authenticity at the national level. Through a reading of the novel, I argue that Brooklyn gentrification is intimately bound with US settler colonialism, which in The Mandibles is sustained by the novel’s representations of finance and the whiteness of its narrative focalization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions)
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