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Literary Criticism General

Restless in Sleep Country

Imagination and the Cultural Politics of Sleep

by (author) Paul Huebener

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
May 2024
Category
General, Sleep & Sleep Disorders, Canadian
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780228020387
    Publish Date
    May 2024
    List Price
    $110.00
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780228020394
    Publish Date
    May 2024
    List Price
    $39.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780228020417
    Publish Date
    May 2024
    List Price
    $39.95

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Description

Sleep, and the lack of it, is a public obsession and an enormous everyday quandary. Troubled sleep tends to be seen as an individual problem and personal responsibility, to be fixed by better habits and tracking gadgets, but the reality is more complicated. Sleep is a site of politics, culture, and power.

In Restless in Sleep Country Paul Huebener pulls back the covers on cultural representations of sleep to show how they are entangled with issues of colonialism, homelessness, consumer culture, technology and privacy, the exploitation of labour, and the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. Even though it almost entirely evades direct experience, sleep is the subject of a variety of potent narratives, each of which can serve to clarify and shape its role in our lives. In Canada, cultural visions of slumber circulate through such diverse forms as mattress commercials, billboards, comic books, memoirs, experimental poetry, and bedtime story phone apps. By guiding us through this imaginative landscape, Huebener shows us how to develop a critical literacy of sleep.

Lying down and closing our eyes is an act that carries surprisingly high stakes, going beyond individual sleep troubles. Restless in Sleep Country illuminates the idea of sleep as a crucial site of inequity, struggle, and gratification.

About the author

Paul Huebener is the author of Timing Canada: The Shifting Politics of Time in Canadian Literary Culture, which was a finalist for the Gabrielle Roy Prize. He is an associate professor of English at Athabasca University and lives in Calgary, Alberta.
 

Paul Huebener's profile page

Editorial Reviews

Restless in Sleep Country exemplifies ‘the importance of the humanities in investigating concerns that are usually assumed to belong to the realms of science, technology, and consumer capitalism.’ Huebener shows how sleep is not just a biological process, but a space from which we negotiate our use of time, the value of our rest, and the social conditions that impact these rights.” Montreal Review of Books

Restless in Sleep Country is an exceptional book – insightful, original, entertaining, thought-provoking, and refreshing! Huebener takes the reader inside the world of sleep treatments and sleep therapy while also deconstructing the neoliberal advertising rhetoric that goes into marketing these things. This is a gently written yet hard-hitting study. I will never think of sleep in the same way.” Cynthia Sugars, University of Ottawa