“New York and yet not New York”: Reading the Region in Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions

The article analyzes the depiction of Brooklyn as an urban region in a number of recent American novels, including Lynne Sharon Schwartz’s Leaving Brooklyn and Kitty Burns Florey’s Solos. It argues that Brooklyn is frequently defined in opposition to Manhattan: the former being viewed as the epitome...

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Main Author: James Peacock
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2008-12-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/6403
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author James Peacock
author_facet James Peacock
author_sort James Peacock
collection DOAJ
description The article analyzes the depiction of Brooklyn as an urban region in a number of recent American novels, including Lynne Sharon Schwartz’s Leaving Brooklyn and Kitty Burns Florey’s Solos. It argues that Brooklyn is frequently defined in opposition to Manhattan: the former being viewed as the epitome of American ideals of community-in-diversity, the latter as homogenizing, globalizing and obsessed with newness. In a time when regions and communities are frequently regarded as under threat from, amongst other things, globalization and terrorism, it is interesting to examine whether the ideals of diversity and community associated with Brooklyn are based on nostalgic, mythic notions of land and family or are in fact based on superficial signifiers of diversity and a range of consumer choices. The article goes on to argue that the complex interactions between the regional and the global in these novels can be seen as analogous to processes of reading regional texts themselves.
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spelling doaj-art-1976c0a75e8b4f2b842db2ba25f136a82025-01-06T09:10:33ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362008-12-013310.4000/ejas.6403“New York and yet not New York”: Reading the Region in Contemporary Brooklyn FictionsJames PeacockThe article analyzes the depiction of Brooklyn as an urban region in a number of recent American novels, including Lynne Sharon Schwartz’s Leaving Brooklyn and Kitty Burns Florey’s Solos. It argues that Brooklyn is frequently defined in opposition to Manhattan: the former being viewed as the epitome of American ideals of community-in-diversity, the latter as homogenizing, globalizing and obsessed with newness. In a time when regions and communities are frequently regarded as under threat from, amongst other things, globalization and terrorism, it is interesting to examine whether the ideals of diversity and community associated with Brooklyn are based on nostalgic, mythic notions of land and family or are in fact based on superficial signifiers of diversity and a range of consumer choices. The article goes on to argue that the complex interactions between the regional and the global in these novels can be seen as analogous to processes of reading regional texts themselves.https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/6403RegionalismJosephBrooklyncommunitydiversitypicturesque
spellingShingle James Peacock
“New York and yet not New York”: Reading the Region in Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions
European Journal of American Studies
Regionalism
Joseph
Brooklyn
community
diversity
picturesque
title “New York and yet not New York”: Reading the Region in Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions
title_full “New York and yet not New York”: Reading the Region in Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions
title_fullStr “New York and yet not New York”: Reading the Region in Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions
title_full_unstemmed “New York and yet not New York”: Reading the Region in Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions
title_short “New York and yet not New York”: Reading the Region in Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions
title_sort new york and yet not new york reading the region in contemporary brooklyn fictions
topic Regionalism
Joseph
Brooklyn
community
diversity
picturesque
url https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/6403
work_keys_str_mv AT jamespeacock newyorkandyetnotnewyorkreadingtheregionincontemporarybrooklynfictions