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Writing Backwards

Historical Fiction and the Reshaping of the American Canon (Literature Now)

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Writing Backwards

By: Alexander Manshel
Narrated by: Mark Sando
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About this listen

Contemporary fiction has never been less contemporary. Midcentury writers tended to set their works in their own moment, but for the last several decades critical acclaim and attention have fixated on historical fiction. This shift is particularly dramatic for writers of color. Even as the literary canon has become more diverse, cultural institutions have celebrated Black, Asian American, Latinx, and Indigenous novelists almost exclusively for their historical fiction.

Writing Backwards explores what the dominance of historical fiction in the contemporary canon reveals about American literary culture. Alexander Manshel investigates the most celebrated historical genrescontemporary narratives of slavery, the World War II novel, the multigenerational family saga, immigrant fiction, and the novel of recent historyalongside the literary and academic institutions that have elevated them. He examines novels by writers including Toni Morrison, Viet Thanh Nguyen, Colson Whitehead, Julia Alvarez, Leslie Marmon Silko, Michael Chabon, Julie Otsuka, Yaa Gyasi, Ben Lerner, and Tommy Orange in the context of MFA programs, literary prizes, university syllabi, book clubs, and the National Endowment for the Arts. Manshel studies how historical fiction has evolved over the last half century, documenting the formation of the newly inclusive literary canon as well as who and what it still excludes.

The book is published by Columbia University Press. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks.

©2024 Columbia University Press (P)2025 Redwood Audiobooks
Literary History & Criticism United States World Literature

Critic reviews

"A fascinating new book . . . exposes the inertia and unspoken rules that shape literary institutions." (Boston Globe)

"One of the year’s most trenchant . . . literary studies." (Wall Street Journal)

"Offers us a surprising new history of the contemporary novel that no future critic will be able to ignore." (John Guillory, author of Professing Criticism)

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