Writing suburbia: the periphery in novels
Autor
Huq, Rupa
Institución
Resumen
Perhaps somewhat befi tting their positioning vis-a-vis the city, the suburbs still
manage to be comparatively marginalized in overview considerations of fi ction.
Th ere is a Penguin Book of the City ; an anthology of fi ctional writing capturing
stories spun in the metropolis. Presumably due to its perceived naff ness, there
is no equivalent volume dealing with the suburb. Yet the examples of such work
are voluminous and vary vastly. At one extreme the futuristic Neuromancer
by William Gibson ( 1984 ) which contains the fi rst ever mention of the word
‘cyberspace’ describes a postsuburban ‘edge city’ (cf. Garreau) environment
where business and technology are emeshed with multinational corporations
in a sprawl called BAMA, the Boston–Atlanta Metropolitan Axis in which the
entire American East Coast from Boston to Atlanta, have merged into a single
urban mass. At the other extreme of suburban fi ction can be found the historical
sweep of events and moralistic undertone of the Delderfi eld ‘Avenue’ books set
from 1919 to 1940.