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- Q6421683 subject Q7210809.
- Q6421683 subject Q8598825.
- Q6421683 abstract "Kmart realism, also termed Dirty realism is a form of minimalist literature found in American short fiction. It is defined as "A literary genre characterized by a spare, terse style that features struggling, working-class characters in sterile, bleak environments". These short stories "represent and reproduce the disintegration of public life [and] the colonization of private life by consumer capitalism". John Gardner, in critical works such as On Moral Fiction, criticized this style using the term "brand-name fiction writers."".
- Q6421683 wikiPageExternalLink fullpage.html?res=9A04E5D8143FF93AA2575BC0A9679C8B63.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q1381985.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q1452794.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q173436.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q1753080.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q217305.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q235615.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q2568215.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q353869.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q49084.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q5164689.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q7091048.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q7210809.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q8242.
- Q6421683 wikiPageWikiLink Q8598825.
- Q6421683 comment "Kmart realism, also termed Dirty realism is a form of minimalist literature found in American short fiction. It is defined as "A literary genre characterized by a spare, terse style that features struggling, working-class characters in sterile, bleak environments". These short stories "represent and reproduce the disintegration of public life [and] the colonization of private life by consumer capitalism".".
- Q6421683 label "Kmart realism".