Skip to content
  • About
    • HASTAC Scholars
    • Conferences
    • Staff
    • History of HASTAC
    • Leadership
    • Core Values
  • Go To…
    • Members
    • Groups
    • Sites
    • CORE Repository
  • Help & Support
  • Organizations
    • HC
    • ARLIS/NA
    • AUPresses
    • MLA
    • MSU
    • SAH
Register Log In
HASTAC Commons
  • Fantasy as a Peripheral Modernism: Uneven Development in Charles de Lint's Urban Fantasy

    Author(s):
    Matthew Rettino (see profile)
    Date:
    2016
    Subject(s):
    Fantasy fiction, Modernism (Literature), Multiculturalism in literature, Canadian literature, Indians of North America, Gothic fiction (Literary genre), Magic realism (Literature), Realism in literature, Historical materialism, Romances
    Item Type:
    Thesis
    Institution:
    McGill University
    Tag(s):
    canada, fantastika, Fantasy fiction, irrealism, magical realism, multiculturalism, Romance, uneven development, utopia, World-System
    Permanent URL:
    https://doi.org/10.17613/543e-yz21
    Abstract:
    Modern fantasy must be analyzed as a modernist literature that posits a critical gesture of refusal of the conditions of modernity. As a form of irrealism, a category that includes Gothic and magic realism, fantasy claims to represent a deeper realism even if it uses non-realist techniques to do so. The combined and uneven capitalist world-system inscribes itself in the urban fantasy of Charles de Lint, which as a peripheral modernism combines residual forms and folkloric, non-modern content within the realist novel. This symbolic act allegorizes 'the synchronicity of the non-synchronous, ' a principal condition of modernity. In de Lint's novel Moonheart, the uneven relationship between colonizer and colonized becomes symbolically resolved through its utopian romance structure, despite the incapability of the Canadian state's policy of multiculturalism to redress First Nations inequality. Mulengro expands the Gothic horror of a Rom superstition into a diagnosis of the general conditions of alienation that haunt modern capitalist society. In Dreams Underfoot, de Lint's short story collection, fantasy represents the unevenness of cities, where the right to the urban life is at stake within the sublime urban totality.
    Notes:
    Master's thesis
    Metadata:
    xml
    Status:
    Published
    Last Updated:
    3 months ago
    License:
    Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives

    Downloads

    Item Name: pdf fantasy-as-a-peripheral-modernism-uneven-development-in-charles-de-lints-urban-fantasy.pdf
      Download View in browser
    Activity: Downloads: 12

    Back to Deposits

Archives

  • September 2022
  • February 2022

Categories

  • Collaboration
  • Connected Learning
  • Environment & Sustainability
  • K-12
  • Pedagogy
  • Uncategorized
  • Visual Arts & Design

Recent Posts

  • Hello world!
  • Guggenheim-y
  • Teach Like a Club: Virtual Reality & Art Therapy
  • The Power of Um
  • Hybrid of a Hybrid: Chimera Teaching?

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
HUMANITIES COMMONS. BASED ON COMMONS IN A BOX.
TERMS OF SERVICE • PRIVACY POLICY • GUIDELINES FOR PARTICIPATION
This site is part of the HASTAC network on Humanities Commons. Explore other sites on this network or register to build your own.
Terms of ServicePrivacy PolicyGuidelines for Participation

@

Not recently active