Image for How to Read a Moment

How to Read a Moment : The American Novel and the Crisis of the Present

Part of the Flashpoints series
See all formats and editions

In How to Read a Moment, Mathias Nilges shows that time is inseparable from the stories we tell about it, demonstrating that the contemporary American novel offers new ways to make sense of the temporality that governs our present. “Time is a thing that grows scarcer every day,” observes one of Don DeLillo’s characters. “The future is gone,” The Baffler argues. “Where’s my hoverboard!?” a meme demands. Contemporary capitalism, a system that insists that everything happen at once, creates problems for social thought and narrative alike.

After all, how does one tell the time of instantaneity?

In this moment of on-demand service and instant trading, it has become difficult to imagine the future. The novel emerged as the art form of a rapidly changing modern world, a way of telling time in its progress.

Nilges argues that this historical mission is renewed today through works that understand contemporaneity as a form of time shaping that props up our material world and cultural imagination.

But the contemporary American novel does not simply associate our present with a crisis of futurity.

Through analyses of works by authors such as DeLillo, Jennifer Egan, Charles Yu, and Colson Whitehead, Nilges illustrates that the novel presents ways to make sense of the temporality that controls our purportedly fully contemporary world.

In so doing, the novel recovers a sense of possibility and hope, forwarding a dazzling argument for its own importance today.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£31.46 Save 10.00%
RRP £34.95
Product Details
0810143429 / 9780810143425
Paperback / softback
30/03/2021
United States
English
264 pages