posted on 2023-09-23, 04:21authored byCaroline Shepherd
<p><strong>In the 15 years since 2008 literature has now had time to reckon with the worst financial collapse in contemporary history. This thesis studies four works of fiction concerned with the Global Financial Crisis, examining how they depict the crisis and illustrate ideas around its broader social impact. The four novels chosen were published across the 2010s and deal in varying ways with the financial collapse: NW (2012) by Zadie Smith, In the Light of What We Know (2014) by Zia Haider Rahman, Imbolo Mbue’s Behold the Dreamers (2016) and Emily St John Mandel’s The Glass Hotel (2020). Ultimately, this project argues that fiction uses the crisis as a revealing instrument, showing problems that had been there all along but were built into the very understanding of the financial system. The novels are studied in tandem, weaving analysis of each across three chapters that deal with systems of abstraction, class, and work, respectively. The first chapter unpacks depiction of the crisis within fiction, and how it is framed as a culmination of the system itself. The second chapter examines how preconceived ideas of class interact with the crisis, and how inequality is built into the modern understanding of the class system. The final chapter examines how ideas of identity, upward mobility and morality in the workplace are left reshaped by the financial collapse.</strong></p>
History
Copyright Date
2023-09-23
Date of Award
2023-09-23
Publisher
Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington
Rights License
Author Retains Copyright
Degree Discipline
English Literature
Degree Grantor
Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington
Degree Level
Masters
Degree Name
Master of Arts
ANZSRC Type Of Activity code
1 Pure basic research
Victoria University of Wellington Item Type
Awarded Research Masters Thesis
Language
en_NZ
Victoria University of Wellington School
School of English, Film, Theatre, Media Studies and Art History