The blinding torch modern British fiction and the discourse of civilization
From the end of the nineteenth century until World War II, questions concerning the ideal nature and current state of "civilization" preoccupied the British public. In a provocative work of both cultural and literary criticism, Brian W. Shaffer explores this debate, showing how representat...
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Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amherst
Univ. of Massachusetts Press
1993
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Schlagworte: |
Geschichte 1900-2000
> Geschichte 1900-1950
> Geschichte 1890-1940
> Civilisation moderne et contemporaine dans la littérature
> Engels
> Fictie
> Littérature et histoire - Grande-Bretagne - Histoire - 20e siècle
> Littérature et société - Grande-Bretagne - Histoire - 20e siècle
> Modernisme (Littérature) - Grande-Bretagne
> Modernisme (cultuur)
> Roman anglais - 20e siècle - Histoire et critique
> Englisch
> Geschichte
> Prosa
> Civilization, Modern, in literature
> English fiction
> History and criticism
> Literature and history
> History
> Literature and society
> Modernism (Literature)
> Roman
> Zivilisation
> Kulturphilosophie
> Kulturkritik
> Großbritannien
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Zusammenfassung: | From the end of the nineteenth century until World War II, questions concerning the ideal nature and current state of "civilization" preoccupied the British public. In a provocative work of both cultural and literary criticism, Brian W. Shaffer explores this debate, showing how representative novels of five British modernists - Joseph Conrad, D. H. Lawrence, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and Malcolm Lowry - address the same issues that engaged such social theorists as Herbert Spencer, Oswald Spengler, Clive Bell, and Sigmund Freud. In examining the intersection of literary discourse and cultural rhetoric, Shaffer draws on the interpretative strategies of Mikhail Bakhtin, Terry Eagleton, Clifford Geertz, and others. He demonstrates that such disparate fictions as Heart of Darkness, The Secret Agent, The Plumed Serpent, Dubliners, Ulysses, Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, and Under the Volcano all portray civilization in the paradoxical image of blindness and insight, obfuscation and enlightenment - as a blinding torch that captivates the eye while it obscures vision. |
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Beschreibung: | XII, 208 S. |
ISBN: | 0870238310 0-87023-831-0 |