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Publication News: 'Grammar and Twentieth-Century American Fiction'

News

Posted on Tuesday 28 October 2025

Warm congratulations to Dr Lola Boorman on the publication of her monograph 'Grammar and Twentieth-Century American Fiction' (Edinburgh University Press).

Grammar and Twentieth-Century American Fiction explores the intersection of American literature and language politics through the curiously understudied subject of grammar.

Taking Gertrude Stein, Zora Neale Hurston, Lydia Davis and David Foster Wallace as key case studies, Lola Boorman makes a series of compelling links between how American authors and intellectuals learned grammar – through various, diverse institutional settings – and how they use it in their work to directly address structures of power, authority, democracy, gender, race and class.

Drawing on the shifting discourses and definitions of grammar in academic disciplines, literary and intellectual movements and para-literary networks – including linguistics, anthropology, language philosophy, self-help grammar books and school pedagogy – the book charts the invisible yet ubiquitous role that grammar has played in literature and literary criticism, and its embeddedness in systems of social and political power and conceptions of national identity.