Charting American Habitus: an analysis of ‘middlebrow’ fiction and its readership through the prism of Donna Tartt’s published novels

This thesis aims to address the paucity of research on contemporary middlebrow fiction and the ongoing tensions in the American literary hierarchy by focussing on the published novels of author Donna Tartt. By examining Tartt’s fiction both through a close reading analysis and an examination of para...

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Main Author: Beestone, Kelly
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55571/
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author Beestone, Kelly
author_facet Beestone, Kelly
author_sort Beestone, Kelly
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis aims to address the paucity of research on contemporary middlebrow fiction and the ongoing tensions in the American literary hierarchy by focussing on the published novels of author Donna Tartt. By examining Tartt’s fiction both through a close reading analysis and an examination of paratextual elements of her work, this thesis argues that Tartt’s novels fall somewhere in the liminal space between highbrow and lowbrow culture. Each chapter looks at one of her novels in detail, drawing on Pierre Bourdieu’s theories on cultural capital and taste as a prism through which Tartt’s books might be examined. The introduction explores the history of literary tensions in America. The first chapter examines the role of protagonist Richard Papen in The Secret History and his position as an unreliable narrator. Chapter two looks at the merging of literary genres in The Little Friend, with a particular focus on the fusing of Southern Gothic and Sentimental fiction. Lastly, chapter three analyses the importance of art in The Goldfinch, concentrating on the Carel Fabritius painting for which Tartt’s novel is named. It is the intention of this thesis to show through each chapter that Tartt balances the cerebral with the emotional, and offers highbrow critics who dismiss her work as ‘popular’ a riposte by opening discussions about what constitutes taste in literature.
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spelling nottingham-555712025-02-28T14:18:27Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55571/ Charting American Habitus: an analysis of ‘middlebrow’ fiction and its readership through the prism of Donna Tartt’s published novels Beestone, Kelly This thesis aims to address the paucity of research on contemporary middlebrow fiction and the ongoing tensions in the American literary hierarchy by focussing on the published novels of author Donna Tartt. By examining Tartt’s fiction both through a close reading analysis and an examination of paratextual elements of her work, this thesis argues that Tartt’s novels fall somewhere in the liminal space between highbrow and lowbrow culture. Each chapter looks at one of her novels in detail, drawing on Pierre Bourdieu’s theories on cultural capital and taste as a prism through which Tartt’s books might be examined. The introduction explores the history of literary tensions in America. The first chapter examines the role of protagonist Richard Papen in The Secret History and his position as an unreliable narrator. Chapter two looks at the merging of literary genres in The Little Friend, with a particular focus on the fusing of Southern Gothic and Sentimental fiction. Lastly, chapter three analyses the importance of art in The Goldfinch, concentrating on the Carel Fabritius painting for which Tartt’s novel is named. It is the intention of this thesis to show through each chapter that Tartt balances the cerebral with the emotional, and offers highbrow critics who dismiss her work as ‘popular’ a riposte by opening discussions about what constitutes taste in literature. 2018-12-12 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55571/1/Donna%20Tartt%20Thesis%20Final.pdf Beestone, Kelly (2018) Charting American Habitus: an analysis of ‘middlebrow’ fiction and its readership through the prism of Donna Tartt’s published novels. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. Tartt Donna Tartt habitus Bbourdieu American literature literature contemporary fiction middlebrow
spellingShingle Tartt
Donna Tartt
habitus
Bbourdieu
American literature
literature
contemporary fiction
middlebrow
Beestone, Kelly
Charting American Habitus: an analysis of ‘middlebrow’ fiction and its readership through the prism of Donna Tartt’s published novels
title Charting American Habitus: an analysis of ‘middlebrow’ fiction and its readership through the prism of Donna Tartt’s published novels
title_full Charting American Habitus: an analysis of ‘middlebrow’ fiction and its readership through the prism of Donna Tartt’s published novels
title_fullStr Charting American Habitus: an analysis of ‘middlebrow’ fiction and its readership through the prism of Donna Tartt’s published novels
title_full_unstemmed Charting American Habitus: an analysis of ‘middlebrow’ fiction and its readership through the prism of Donna Tartt’s published novels
title_short Charting American Habitus: an analysis of ‘middlebrow’ fiction and its readership through the prism of Donna Tartt’s published novels
title_sort charting american habitus: an analysis of ‘middlebrow’ fiction and its readership through the prism of donna tartt’s published novels
topic Tartt
Donna Tartt
habitus
Bbourdieu
American literature
literature
contemporary fiction
middlebrow
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55571/