Centuries’ Ends, Narrative Means

Centuries’ Ends, Narrative Means
Author: Interdisciplinary Group for Historical Literary Study
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 414
Release: 1996
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780804726498

This pathbreaking work uses the approaching conclusion of the second millennium as a context for discussing questions concerning temporal division and narrative continuity. It investigates assumptions about teleology and eschatology while exploring the ways in which temporal division affects the creation and production of cultural texts and, reciprocally, the ways in which narrative techniques, forms, and conventions shape, explain, and justify history. Through this exploration, the volume examines how temporal thresholds tend simultaneously to reinforce and to disrupt conceptual boundaries. The sixteen essays use the significance typically invested in historical junctures marked by a centenary advance to investigate perceived paradigm shifts and the consequent reactions to these implicit and explicit transitions. By doing so, they also seek to illuminate the relations between narrative and history, and to enhance understanding of our present historical moment.

Narrative Means, Lyric Ends

Narrative Means, Lyric Ends
Author: Monique R. Morgan
Publisher: Theory Interpretation Narrativ
Total Pages: 262
Release: 2009
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

How did nineteenth-century poets negotiate the complex interplay between two seemingly antithetical modes--lyric and narrative? Narrative Means, Lyric Ends examines the solutions offered by four canonical long poems: William Wordsworth's The Prelude, Lord Byron's Don Juan, Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Aurora Leigh, and Robert Browning's The Ring and the Book. Monique Morgan argues that each of these texts uses narrative techniques to create lyrical effects, effects that manipulate readers' experience of time and shape their intellectual, emotional, and ethical responses. To highlight the productive tension between the modes, Morgan defines narrative as essentially temporal and sequential, and lyric as creating an illusion of simultaneity. The poems reinforce their larger narrative strategies, she suggests, with their figurative language. Through her readings of these texts, Morgan questions lyric's brevity and associability, interrogates retrospection's importance for narrative, examines the gendered implications of several genres, and determines the dramatic monologue's temporal structure. Narrative Means, Lyric Ends offers four case studies of the interactions between broad modes and among specific genres, changes our aesthetic and ideological assumptions about lyric and narrative, expands the domain of narratology, and advocates a renewed formalism.

Language, Gender, and Community in Late Twentieth-Century Fiction

Language, Gender, and Community in Late Twentieth-Century Fiction
Author: M. Hurst
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 400
Release: 2011-04-11
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0230118267

Drawing on critical frameworks, this study establishes the centrality of language, gender, and community in the quest for identity in contemporary American fiction. Close readings of novels by Alice Walker, Ernest Gaines, Ann Beattie, John Updike, Chang-rae Lee, and Rudolfo Anaya, among others, show how individuals find their American identities.

Political Prayer in Nineteenth-Century American Literature

Political Prayer in Nineteenth-Century American Literature
Author: Amy Dunham Strand
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2024-09-30
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1040127223

Political Prayer in Nineteenth-Century American Literature explores how American women writers such as Catharine Maria Sedgwick, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Rebecca Harding Davis, and Emily Dickinson translated petitioning – a political form for redress of grievances with religious resonance, or what Strand calls “political prayer” – in their literary works. At a time when petitioning was historically transforming governments, mobilizing masses, and democratizing North America, these White women writers wrote “literary petitions” to advocate for others in social justice causes such as antiremoval, antislavery, and labor reform, to transform American literature and culture, and to articulate an ambivalent political agency. Political Prayer in Nineteenth-Century American Literature introduces historic petitioning into literary study as an overlooked but important new lens for reading nineteenth-century fiction and poetry. Understanding petitions in these literary works – and these literary works as petitions – also helps us to understand women’s political agency before their enfranchisement, to explain why scholars have long debated and inconsistently interpreted the works of well-anthologized women writers, and to see more clearly the multidimensional, coexisting, and often competing religious and political aspects of their writings.

W.E.B. Du Bois and the Problems of the Twenty-First Century

W.E.B. Du Bois and the Problems of the Twenty-First Century
Author: Reiland Rabaka
Publisher: Lexington Books
Total Pages: 297
Release: 2007-02-03
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0739162349

W.E.B. Du Bois and the Problems of the Twenty-First Century utilizes Du Bois's thought and texts to develop an Africana Studies-informed critical theory of contemporary society.

Textual Practice

Textual Practice
Author: Lindsay Deputy Editor: Smith
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 223
Release: 2006-02
Genre: Education
ISBN: 113480511X

Since its launch in 1987 TP has been Britain's principal international journal of radical literary studies, continually pressing theory into new engagments.

The Lost Geopoetic Horizon of Li Jieren

The Lost Geopoetic Horizon of Li Jieren
Author: Kenny Kwok-kwan Ng
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 319
Release: 2015-03-10
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9004292667

Engaged with the paradigms of cultural geography, local history, spatial politics, and everyday life, The Lost Geopoetic Horizon of Li Jieren unveils a Sichuan writer’s lifelong quest: an independent historical fiction writing project on Chengdu from the turn of the century through China’s 1911 Revolution. Kenny Kwok-kwan Ng's study illuminates the crisis of writing home in a globalized age by rescuing Li Jieren’s repeatedly revised but never finished river-novel series written from Republican to Communist China, struggling to liberate local memory from the national cum revolutionary currents. The book undercuts official historiography and rewrites Chinese literary history from the ground up by highlighting Li’s resilient geopoetics of writing that decenters the nation by adopting the place-based view of a distant province.

The Fiction of Narrative

The Fiction of Narrative
Author: Hayden White
Publisher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 419
Release: 2010-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 0801894808

For students and scholars of historiography, the theory of history, and literary studies, Robert Doran (French and comparative literature, U. of Rochester) gathers together 23 previously uncollected essays written by theorist and historian Hayden White (comparative literature, Stanford U.) from 1957 to 2007, on his theories of historical writing and narrative. Essays are organized chronologically and reveal the evolution of White's thought and its relationship to theories of the time, as well as the impact on the way scholars think about historical representation, the discipline of history, and how historiography intersects with other areas, especially literary studies. They specifically address theory of tropes, theory of narrative, and figuralism.