This paper explores selected novels by John Berger in which cities play a central role. These cities are places, partially real and partially imagined, where memory, hope, and despair intersect. My reading of the novels enables me to trace important themes in recent discourses on the nature of contemporary capitalism, including notions of resistance and universality. I also show how Berger?s work points to a writing that can break free from the curious capacity of capitalism to absorb and feed of its critique
Insofar as they show readers what capitalism does to their daily lives, novels have always been cont...
This thesis explores the representation of utopian spaces as a form of opposition to capitalism in c...
This article explores the possibilities of contemporary London writing to challenge established spat...
This dissertation reads twentieth and twenty-first century U.S. multicultural literatures, women’s l...
This book brings the insights of social geographers and cultural historians into a critical dialogue...
The emerging genre of ‘Crunch Lit’ uses fiction to respond to the 2007-8 credit crisis. Focusing on ...
This dissertation argues that traditional models of 'place' based on the city-country dichotomy do n...
With urban imaginaries and city-making in mind, and cognisant of the complicity of cities in socio-e...
The emerging genre of ‘Crunch Lit’ uses fiction to respond to the 2007-8 credit crisis. Focusing on ...
The emerging genre of ‘Crunch Lit’ uses fiction to respond to the 2007-2008 credit crisis. Focusing ...
This dissertation argues that traditional models of 'place' based on the city-country dichotomy do n...
This thesis is a study of the entire range of John Berger's writings, and an examination of the int...
This dissertation uses literary theory, cultural studies, and human geography to show how social spa...
This article compares the late work of Guyanese author Wilson Harris with that of the English writer...
This is one of a number of papers in the same issue of CITY on the theme "How should we write about ...
Insofar as they show readers what capitalism does to their daily lives, novels have always been cont...
This thesis explores the representation of utopian spaces as a form of opposition to capitalism in c...
This article explores the possibilities of contemporary London writing to challenge established spat...
This dissertation reads twentieth and twenty-first century U.S. multicultural literatures, women’s l...
This book brings the insights of social geographers and cultural historians into a critical dialogue...
The emerging genre of ‘Crunch Lit’ uses fiction to respond to the 2007-8 credit crisis. Focusing on ...
This dissertation argues that traditional models of 'place' based on the city-country dichotomy do n...
With urban imaginaries and city-making in mind, and cognisant of the complicity of cities in socio-e...
The emerging genre of ‘Crunch Lit’ uses fiction to respond to the 2007-8 credit crisis. Focusing on ...
The emerging genre of ‘Crunch Lit’ uses fiction to respond to the 2007-2008 credit crisis. Focusing ...
This dissertation argues that traditional models of 'place' based on the city-country dichotomy do n...
This thesis is a study of the entire range of John Berger's writings, and an examination of the int...
This dissertation uses literary theory, cultural studies, and human geography to show how social spa...
This article compares the late work of Guyanese author Wilson Harris with that of the English writer...
This is one of a number of papers in the same issue of CITY on the theme "How should we write about ...
Insofar as they show readers what capitalism does to their daily lives, novels have always been cont...
This thesis explores the representation of utopian spaces as a form of opposition to capitalism in c...
This article explores the possibilities of contemporary London writing to challenge established spat...