

An edition of Cult fiction (1996)
popular readings and pulp theory
By Clive Bloom
Publish Date
1996
Publisher
Macmillan Press
Language
eng
Pages
262
Description:
Here is an exploration of pulp literature and pulp mentalities: an investigation into the nature and theory of the contemporary mind in art and in life. Here too, the violent, the sensational and the erotic signify different facets of the modern experience played out in the gaudy pages of kitsch literature. Clive Bloom offers the reader a chance to investigate the underworld of literary production and from it find a new set of co-ordinates for questions regarding publishing and reading practices in America and Britain, ideas of genre, problems related to commercial production, concerns regarding high and low culture, the canon and censorship, as well as a discussion of the rhetoric of current critical debate. Concentrating on remembered authors as well as many long disregarded or forgotten, Cult Fiction provides a theory of kitsch art that radically alters our perceptions of literature and literary values while providing a panorama of an almost forgotten history: the history of pulp.
subjects: History and criticism, Popular literature, Canon (Literature), Authors and readers, English fiction, American fiction, Pulp literature, Fiction, history and criticism, 18.05 English literature, 18.06 Anglo-American literature, 17.86 literary genres, theory of genre, Englisch, Kanon, Leseverhalten, Literatur, Trivialliteratur, Amerikaans, Engels, Populaire literatuur, Popular literature, history and criticism, American fiction, history and criticism, 20th century
Places: United States, English-speaking countries, Great Britain