Affiliation:
1. 0000000405989700York St John University
Abstract
Traditionally, the short story has been understood as almost synonymous with loneliness, characterized by theorists and writers like Frank O’Connor as the quintessential ‘lonely form’. Contemporary short story writer Diane Williams stands out for her idiosyncratic
challenge to the conventions of short story structure, drawing deliberately on the partiality and contingency of the anecdote. Analysing the structure and style of Williams’s 2016 collection Fine, Fine, Fine, Fine, Fine, this article explores how a turn to anecdotal structures
might shift the short story form’s traditional polarity towards loneliness ‐ a particularly urgent question in an increasingly lonely culture.
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Language and Linguistics,Cultural Studies
Reference22 articles.
1. Terse and trying tales;The Irish Times,2016
2. Vis-à-vis the mysteries of daily life;Los Angeles Review of Books,2016
3. Alone in the crowd: The structure and spread of loneliness in a large social network;Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,2009
4. Diane Williams is at her unconventional best;Los Angeles Times,2016
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1 articles.
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