The Cambridge Companion to Kazuo Ishiguro
Author(s): Edited by Andrew Bennett
🚚 Free UK delivery on books (excluding sale). T&Cs apply.
Free click & collect on all orders.
The Cambridge Companion to Kazuo Ishiguro offers an accessible introduction to key aspects of the novelist's remarkable body of work. The volume addresses Ishiguro's engagement with fundamental questions of humanity and personal responsibility, with aesthetic value and political valency, with the vicissitudes of memory and historical documentation, and with questions of family, home, and homelessness. Focused through the personal experiences of some of the most memorable characters in contemporary fiction, Ishiguro's writing speaks to the major communitarian questions of our time – questions of nationalism and colonialism, race and ethnicity, migration, war, and cultural memory and social justice. The chapters attend to Ishiguro's highly readable novels while also ranging across his other creative output. Gathering together established and emerging scholars from the UK, Europe, the USA, and East Asia, the volume offers a survey of key works and themes while also moving critical discussion forward in new and challenging ways.
- A reliable, authoritative, accessible and clearly-written guide to Ishiguro's novels and short stories
- Covers all the major works and key themes and topics to provide a comprehensive introduction to Ishiguro and his work
- Collects up-to-date and innovative chapters from distinguished Ishiguro scholars and emerging experts in the field, specially commissioned to reflect current concerns in Ishiguro criticism and to move critical discussion forward in new and innovative ways