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Ethical Desire: Betrayal in Contemporary British Fiction

This dissertation investigates representations of betrayal in works by Hanif Kureishi,
Salman Rushdie, Irvine Welsh, and Alan Hollinghurst. In rethinking "bad" acts of
betrayal as embodying an ethical desire not for the good but for "the better," this
dissertation challenges the simplistic good/bad binary as mandated by neo-imperialist,
late capitalist, and heteronormative society. In doing so, my project intervenes in the
current paradigm of ethical literary criticism, whose focus on the canon and the universal
Good gained from it runs a risk of underwriting moral majoritarianism and
judgmentalism. I argue that some contemporary narratives of betrayal open up onto a
new ethic, insofar as they reveal the unethical totalization assumed in ethical literary
criticism's pursuit of the normative Good.
The first full chapter analyzes how Kureishi's Intimacy portrays an ethical
adultery as it breaks away from the tenacious authority of monogamy in portraying adult
intimacy in literature, what I call the narrative of "coupledom." Instead, Intimacy
imagines a new narrative of "singledom" unconstrained by the marriage/adultery dyad.
In the next chapter on Fury, a novel about Manhattan's celebrity culture, I interrogate the current discourse of cosmopolitanism and propose that Rushdie's novel exposes how
both cosmopolitanism and nationalism are turned into political commodities by mediafrenzied
and celebrity-obsessed metropolitan cultural politics. In a world where an
ethical choice between cosmopolitanism and nationalism is impossible to make, Fury
achieves an ethical act of treason against both. The next chapter scrutinizes Mark
Renton's "ripping off" of his best mates and his critique of capitalism in Trainspotting
and Porno. If Renton betrays his friends in order to leave the plan(e) of capitalism in the
original novel, he satirizes the trustworthiness of trust in Porno by crushing his best
mate's blind trust in business "ethics" and by ripping him off again. The last full chapter
updates the link between aesthetics and ethics in post-AIDS contexts in Hollinghurst's
The Line of Beauty. In portraying without judgment beautiful, dark-skinned, dying
homosexual bodies, Hollinghurst's novel "fleshes out" the traditional sphere of
aesthetics that denies the low and impure pleasures frequently paired with gay sex.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-05-7875
Date2010 May 1900
CreatorsKim, Soo Yeon
ContributorsMcWhirter, David
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis, text
Formatapplication/pdf

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