ABSTRACT

In Reading Contingency: The Accident in Contemporary Fiction, David Wylot constructs an innovative study of the relationship between plotted accidents in twenty-first century British and American fiction, the phenomenology of reading, and a contemporary experience of time that is increasingly understood to be contingent and accidental. A synthesis of literary and cultural analysis, narratology, critical theories of time and the philosophy of contingency, the book explores the accident’s imagination of contemporary time and the relationship between reading and living in novels by writers including A.M. Homes, Nicola Barker, Noah Hawley, J.M. Coetzee, J.G. Ballard, Jesmyn Ward, Jennifer Egan, and Tom McCarthy.

chapter |34 pages

Introduction

Accident and Contingency

part 1|58 pages

Time

chapter 1|27 pages

Forwards

Accident, Event, and Picaresque

chapter 2|29 pages

Backwards

Accident, Coincidence, and Teleological Retrospection

part 2|34 pages

Narrative

chapter 3|32 pages

Forwards and Backwards

Reading Contingency

part 3|60 pages

Accident Narratives

chapter 4|30 pages

Radical Contingency

chapter 5|28 pages

Unassimilable Contingency

chapter |5 pages

Coda