Drink and Alcohol Literature: Two Critical Perspectives
Drink and Alcohol Literature: Two Critical Perspectives
Author(s): Wojciech KlepuszewskiSubject(s): Substance abuse and addiction, Health and medicine and law, Sociology of Culture, Theory of Literature, Sociology of Literature
Published by: Debreceni Egyetem
Keywords: drink and alcohol; literary criticism; British Isles literature; American literature; conviviality; alcoholism; pathology; drinking culture; representation of drink; comparative perspectives;
Summary/Abstract: The essay discusses two contrasting critical perspectives on the intersection between drink/alcohol and literature, claiming that criticism concerning the literature of the British Isles (English, Scottish, and Irish authors’ work) is generally text-oriented, that is, targets literature per se and the way writers thematize drink, while criticism concentrating on the American literary scene focuses on the alcohol-dependence of writers, and/or the way their alcoholdependence affects their work, or the way alcoholism is portrayed in literary works. Whereas the criticism on authors in the British Isles emphasizes conviviality as a key trait of the way drink/drinking is represented in literature, studies on American authors often highlight drinking alcohol as a pathology, a physical, mental, and social malfunction. Thus, the former can be labeled drink/drinking literature, and the latter can be framed as what Marcus Grants has dubbed “alcoholism literature.”
Journal: Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies
- Issue Year: 24/2018
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 375-387
- Page Count: 13
- Language: English
