Novelistic Love in the Platonic Tradition: Fielding, Faulkner, and the PostmodernistsRowman & Littlefield, 1997 - 215 էջ The love story is an integral part of many novels. What is its narrative status? How does it function, and why? In this original study of Socratic 'love stories, ' from Plato through Fielding and Faulkner to the Postmodernists, Jennie Wang proposes a new narrative theory in the study of the novel, which deconstructs the mimesis of 'love stories' and reconstructs their historicity. Wang claims that in the Platonic tradition, the construction of 'love stories' is often a dramatization of the author's historical vision, philosophical speculations, cultural criticism, or political ideology. Novelistic love functions as a literary medium, a power of free speech, that enables the novelist to speak unspeakable truths and include excluded subjects. Wang's work will be of interest to both philosophers and scholars of American literature and postmodernism. |
From inside the book
այս գրքում epic love-ին համապատասխանող 73 էջ
Որտե՞ղ է այս գրքի մնացած մասը:
Արդյունքներ 73–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Բովանդակություն
The Invention of Greek Love | 29 |
Epic Love and the English Novel | 67 |
The Legitimate Lover of Sophia | 89 |
Հեղինակային իրավունք | |
3 այլ բաժինները չեն ցուցադրվում
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
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aesthetic Alcibiades Allworthy American Aristophanes artistic bear beloved Blifil Bridget chapter character chivalry comic consciousness courtly love criticism cultural Defoe Delta Autumn Diotima dramatic economic English novel epic love Eryximachus ethics feminine fiction Fielding Fielding's Finnegans Wake GD,M happy heart's truth Henry Fielding honor human Ian Watt idea ideal identity ideology Ike's immortal Jenny Jenny Jones Jones Joyce Lady language legitimacy linguistic literary love love stories lover's discourse Lucas marriage McCaslin metaphor middle-class mode modern Moses narrative nigger novelistic love Pamela panegyric Paradise Hall Philosopher Ruler Plato Platonic love Platonic tradition poem political postmodern fiction prince public discourse question reader reality rhetoric Richardson rightful ruler romantic love Roth Edmonds scene sexual social society Socrates Sophia speak speech spirit stage Symposium telling text of pleasure theory thou timarchy Tom Jones Tom's virtue voice William Faulkner wisdom woman word writing York