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“Kill the Monster!”: "My Favorite Thing Is Monsters" and the Big, Ambitious (Graphic) Novel

    1. [1] Ghent University

      Ghent University

      Arrondissement Gent, Bélgica

    2. [2] Bryn Mawr College

      Bryn Mawr College

      Township of Lower Merion, Estados Unidos

  • Localización: Genre: Forms of Discourse and Culture, ISSN 0016-6928, ISSN-e 2160-0228, Vol. 54, Nº. 1, 2021 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Big, Ambitious Novels by Twenty-First-Century Women, Part 1), págs. 17-42
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • In his discussion of the “big, ambitious novel,” James Wood dismisses both male and female authors but singles out Zadie Smith's White Teeth for most of his critique of what he terms “hysterical realism.” For Wood, recent long novels display too much imagination but not enough substance and depth of character; the new novel has become “a picture of life.” With its deliberate foregrounding of inhumanness and spectacularity, Emil Ferris's My Favorite Thing Is Monsters commits many of Wood's list of transgressions against the traditional novel. This article examines how Ferris's book is unaffected by negative reactions to this transgressiveness, championing transgression and ignored voices as the mode of expression best suited to the big, ambitious novel of our times. The book's heroine and purported author of the book touches readers and moves them through the monstrous form she imagines for herself. Her reproductions of comics covers and art works negotiate diverse visual vocabularies and their resulting aesthetic and historical scope. In filtering its story through a young protagonist who is marginalized on all counts (age, class, race, sex, sexual orientation), Ferris's “big, ambitious (graphic) novel” is also a layered response against the criticisms of childishness levied against comics. Transgression in My Favorite Thing Is Monsters becomes a way of rethinking tradition—of comics, of novels, and of graphic novels—in the broader terms of cultural history.


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