James Peacock | Keele University (original) (raw)

Papers by James Peacock

Research paper thumbnail of Series editors’ foreword

Research paper thumbnail of Apocalypse after Apocalypse: Reggie Nadelson's Artie Cohen Novels

This article looks at three New York crime novels by Reggie Nadelson - Disturbed Earth (2004), Re... more This article looks at three New York crime novels by Reggie Nadelson - Disturbed Earth (2004), Red Hook (2005) and Manhattan 62 (2014). It argues that the atmosphere in these stories is, partly in response to 9/11, exaggeratedly apocalyptic, but that ultimately they emphasise historical continuities and reject apocalyptic thinking

Research paper thumbnail of Self-Dispersal and Self-Help: Paul Auster’s Second Person

Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of The Clash Takes on the World: Transnational Perspectives on the Only Band That Matters

Popular Music and Society, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Carrying the Burden of Representation: Paul Auster's The Book of Illusions

Journal of American Studies, 2006

The most important thing in art is The Frame. For painting: literally; for other arts: figurative... more The most important thing in art is The Frame. For painting: literally; for other arts: figuratively – because, without this humble appliance, you can't know where The Art stops and The Real World begins. You have to put a “box” around it because otherwise, what is that shit on the wall?If John Cage, for instance, says, “I'm putting a contact microphone on my throat, and I'm going to drink carrot juice, and that's my composition,” then his gurgling qualifies as his composition because he put a frame around it and said so. “Take it or leave it, I nowwillthis to bemusic.” After that it's a matter of taste. Without the frame-as-announced, it's a guy swallowing carrot juice.

Research paper thumbnail of From a Long Way Away: New York and London in The Clash's 'Red Angel Dragnet

Research paper thumbnail of Mixed media

Research paper thumbnail of The Clash Takes on the World

Research paper thumbnail of Alice in the academy

Research paper thumbnail of PEACOCK A Tale of Too Many Cities : The Clash ’ s ‘ Ghetto Defendant ’ and Transnational Disruptions

Research paper thumbnail of Ariel Dorfman, Other Septembers, Other Americas: Selected Provocations 1980–2004 (London: Pluto Press, 2004, £12.99). Pp. xvi, 272. ISBN 0 7453 2173 9

Journal of American Studies, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Those the Dead Left Behind Gentrification and Haunting in Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions

Studies in American Fiction, 2019

Research paper thumbnail of ‘We learned to tell our story walking’: Tourette's and urban space in Motherless Brooklyn

Research paper thumbnail of The Light and the Fogg: Edward Hopper and Paul Auster

Research paper thumbnail of A Tale of Too Many Cities: The Clash's 'Ghetto Defendant'and Transnational Disruptions

Research paper thumbnail of Introduction: The Transnational Clash

The Clash Takes on the World, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of An Interview with Emily Barton

Contemporary Literature, 2015

Research paper thumbnail of Growing Up Too Quickly: The Cultural Construction of Children in Lyndsay Faye’s Gods of Gotham Trilogy

21st Century US Historical Fiction, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Autobodies: Detectives, Disorders, and Getting out of the Neighborhood

Research paper thumbnail of Autobodies: Detectives, Disorders, and Getting out of the Neighborhood

European Journal of American Studies, 2021

This article explores two detective stories featuring protagonists with neurological conditions. ... more This article explores two detective stories featuring protagonists with neurological conditions. Lionel Essrog, the narrator of Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn (1999), suffers from Tourette’s Syndrome, and Mark Genevich, hero of Paul Tremblay’s The Little Sleep (2009), has narcolepsy. Each character is unusually attached to his home neighborhood: Essrog to Court Street in Brooklyn and Genevich to South Boston. Indeed, Genevich still lives in his grandparents’ brownstone. What is striking in both novels is how closely their conditions are also connected to these neighborhoods. Essrog’s tics and outbursts mirror the chaos of his Brooklyn, but his obsessive, smoothing-over tendencies reflect his guilt over his orphan status, his desire to reach back into and repair the past. Genevich’s narcolepsy keeps him in “Southie” partly because of his reliance on his mother and partly, in practical terms, because it is dangerous for him to drive. Most importantly, his unpredictable sleep puts “more unconscious space between [him]self and the events [he] experienced”—traumatically induced, his “little sleeps” are “fraudulent extra days, weeks, years,” disruptions in time, when the past invades his dreams. It is significant that Genevich’s condition arises after a car accident in which his friend was killed. In fact, cars are important in both novels. I argue that, as symbols of modernity and American mobility, cars signify in complex relation with the protagonists’ homes and neurological conditions. The “auto body,” to quote one of Motherless Brooklyn’s chapter titles, puns on the involuntary, automatic behaviours of the tourettic and narcoleptic body, but also offers the possiblity of mobility both physical and metaphorical: an escape from the neighborhood and associated obsessions, a way for the detective to connect a wider set of locations and relations, to remap himself beyond the confines of a narrowly imagined community and the restrictions of his condition.

Research paper thumbnail of Series editors’ foreword

Research paper thumbnail of Apocalypse after Apocalypse: Reggie Nadelson's Artie Cohen Novels

This article looks at three New York crime novels by Reggie Nadelson - Disturbed Earth (2004), Re... more This article looks at three New York crime novels by Reggie Nadelson - Disturbed Earth (2004), Red Hook (2005) and Manhattan 62 (2014). It argues that the atmosphere in these stories is, partly in response to 9/11, exaggeratedly apocalyptic, but that ultimately they emphasise historical continuities and reject apocalyptic thinking

Research paper thumbnail of Self-Dispersal and Self-Help: Paul Auster’s Second Person

Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of The Clash Takes on the World: Transnational Perspectives on the Only Band That Matters

Popular Music and Society, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Carrying the Burden of Representation: Paul Auster's The Book of Illusions

Journal of American Studies, 2006

The most important thing in art is The Frame. For painting: literally; for other arts: figurative... more The most important thing in art is The Frame. For painting: literally; for other arts: figuratively – because, without this humble appliance, you can't know where The Art stops and The Real World begins. You have to put a “box” around it because otherwise, what is that shit on the wall?If John Cage, for instance, says, “I'm putting a contact microphone on my throat, and I'm going to drink carrot juice, and that's my composition,” then his gurgling qualifies as his composition because he put a frame around it and said so. “Take it or leave it, I nowwillthis to bemusic.” After that it's a matter of taste. Without the frame-as-announced, it's a guy swallowing carrot juice.

Research paper thumbnail of From a Long Way Away: New York and London in The Clash's 'Red Angel Dragnet

Research paper thumbnail of Mixed media

Research paper thumbnail of The Clash Takes on the World

Research paper thumbnail of Alice in the academy

Research paper thumbnail of PEACOCK A Tale of Too Many Cities : The Clash ’ s ‘ Ghetto Defendant ’ and Transnational Disruptions

Research paper thumbnail of Ariel Dorfman, Other Septembers, Other Americas: Selected Provocations 1980–2004 (London: Pluto Press, 2004, £12.99). Pp. xvi, 272. ISBN 0 7453 2173 9

Journal of American Studies, 2005

Research paper thumbnail of Those the Dead Left Behind Gentrification and Haunting in Contemporary Brooklyn Fictions

Studies in American Fiction, 2019

Research paper thumbnail of ‘We learned to tell our story walking’: Tourette's and urban space in Motherless Brooklyn

Research paper thumbnail of The Light and the Fogg: Edward Hopper and Paul Auster

Research paper thumbnail of A Tale of Too Many Cities: The Clash's 'Ghetto Defendant'and Transnational Disruptions

Research paper thumbnail of Introduction: The Transnational Clash

The Clash Takes on the World, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of An Interview with Emily Barton

Contemporary Literature, 2015

Research paper thumbnail of Growing Up Too Quickly: The Cultural Construction of Children in Lyndsay Faye’s Gods of Gotham Trilogy

21st Century US Historical Fiction, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Autobodies: Detectives, Disorders, and Getting out of the Neighborhood

Research paper thumbnail of Autobodies: Detectives, Disorders, and Getting out of the Neighborhood

European Journal of American Studies, 2021

This article explores two detective stories featuring protagonists with neurological conditions. ... more This article explores two detective stories featuring protagonists with neurological conditions. Lionel Essrog, the narrator of Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn (1999), suffers from Tourette’s Syndrome, and Mark Genevich, hero of Paul Tremblay’s The Little Sleep (2009), has narcolepsy. Each character is unusually attached to his home neighborhood: Essrog to Court Street in Brooklyn and Genevich to South Boston. Indeed, Genevich still lives in his grandparents’ brownstone. What is striking in both novels is how closely their conditions are also connected to these neighborhoods. Essrog’s tics and outbursts mirror the chaos of his Brooklyn, but his obsessive, smoothing-over tendencies reflect his guilt over his orphan status, his desire to reach back into and repair the past. Genevich’s narcolepsy keeps him in “Southie” partly because of his reliance on his mother and partly, in practical terms, because it is dangerous for him to drive. Most importantly, his unpredictable sleep puts “more unconscious space between [him]self and the events [he] experienced”—traumatically induced, his “little sleeps” are “fraudulent extra days, weeks, years,” disruptions in time, when the past invades his dreams. It is significant that Genevich’s condition arises after a car accident in which his friend was killed. In fact, cars are important in both novels. I argue that, as symbols of modernity and American mobility, cars signify in complex relation with the protagonists’ homes and neurological conditions. The “auto body,” to quote one of Motherless Brooklyn’s chapter titles, puns on the involuntary, automatic behaviours of the tourettic and narcoleptic body, but also offers the possiblity of mobility both physical and metaphorical: an escape from the neighborhood and associated obsessions, a way for the detective to connect a wider set of locations and relations, to remap himself beyond the confines of a narrowly imagined community and the restrictions of his condition.

Research paper thumbnail of A Conversation with Jonathan Lethem

As part of a project funded by the AHRC, called "Brooklyn Fictions: The Contemporary Urban Commun... more As part of a project funded by the AHRC, called "Brooklyn Fictions: The Contemporary Urban Community in a Global Age," I conducted a public interview with Jonathan Lethem at Pomona College called "Novel Communities." It took place on 7 March 2013.

Research paper thumbnail of The Clash Takes on the World: Transnational Perspectives on The Only Band That Matters - Book Launch Event Video

On 1 September 2017 I hosted a book launch event for the essay collection I co-edited with Sam Co... more On 1 September 2017 I hosted a book launch event for the essay collection I co-edited with Sam Cohen (Missouri). It took place at The Wonder Inn in Manchester (now, very sadly, no more) and included my introductory talk about the book, followed by live music, punk poetry, short story readings, physical theatre and a DJ set.