2. Innocence, Experience and Other Childly Songs in Max Porter’s Works
Clémentine Beauvais
3. “Pitiful narrative creatures”: Grief-Haunted Temporalities in the Work of Max Porter
Lindsey Drager
4. “An English totem”: Constructions of Englishness in Lanny
Julie Irigaray
5. “Peace, my stranger is a tree”: Compassionate Experimentalism in Lanny
Alex J. Calder
6. Narrative Vision and Scopic Injustice in Lanny
Paweł Wojtas
7. “Is this one of your endings?” Lanny and the Humanist Limits of Narrative Possibility
Tom Z. Bradstreet
8. Lost Futures and Ecophobia in Lanny
Alice Durocher
9. Language as Percussion: The Brutal Style of The Death of Francis Bacon
Joseph Darlington
10. Ut Pictura Poesis: Speaking Paintings in The Death of Francis Bacon
Robert Kusek and Wojciech Szymański
11. Ornithology as Intertextuality: A Guide to Max Porter’s Birds (and Where to Find Them)
David Rudrum and James Underwood
12. A Colloquy on Shy
David Rudrum and Paweł Wojtas
David Rudrum is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Huddersfield. Most of his work explores the interdisciplinary relations between contemporary philosophy and literature. Previous publications include New Directions in Philosophy and Literature (2019), Supplanting the Postmodern (2015) and Stanley Cavell and the Claim of Literature (2013).
Paweł Wojtas is Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Artes Liberales, University of Warsaw. His research interests include contemporary English and related literature, as well as literary and cultural disability studies. He is the author of Narratives of Disability and Illness in the Fiction of J. M. Coetzee (2024).
Wojciech Drąg is Associate Professor at the University of Wrocław in Poland. He is the author of Collage in Twenty-First-Century Literature in English: Art of Crisis (2020) and Revisiting Loss: Memory, Trauma and Nostalgia in the Novels of Kazuo Ishiguro (2014).