56 pages • 1 hour read
Tobias WolffA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.
While Realism uses simple language to explore everyday life rather than fantastical tales and adventures, Dirty Realism is a subcategory of Realism that explores the darker side of contemporary life and often focuses on the world of those in a lower socioeconomic group.
Editor and author Bill Buford, known for Among the Thugs (1990) and Heat (2006), coined the term in 1983, two years after Wolff published “Hunters in the Snow.” In Buford’s words, Dirty Realism explores “the belly-side of contemporary life […] informed by discomforting and sometimes elusive irony” and follows the boring lives of normal people, people who “hunt deer, and stay in cheap hotels,” people who “are often in trouble: for stealing a car, breaking a window, pickpocketing a wallet […] drifters in a world cluttered with junk food and the oppressive details of modern consumerism” (Buford, Bill. “Editorial.” Granta, 1 Jun. 1983). This description is directly applicable to “Hunters in the Snow,” from its irony to the hunting to Tub’s overeating.
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