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Fictional Death and the Modernist Enterprise (Paperback)
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Fictional Death and the Modernist Enterprise (Paperback)
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Cultures reveal themselves in how they react to death: how they
ritualize it, tell its story, heal themselves. Before the modern
period, death and dying seemed definitive, public and appropriate.
The industrial revolution, the Great War and the radical
re-envisioning of inner and outer reality after Marx, Darwin,
Nietzsche, Einstein, van Gennep and Freud destabilized cultural
norms and transformed the protocols of death and dying. In
Fictional Death and the Modernist Enterprise, first published in
1995, Alan Friedman traces the semiotics of death and dying in
twentieth-century fiction, history and culture. He describes how
modernist writers either, like Forster and Woolf, elided rituals of
dying and death; or, rediscovering the body as Lawrence and
Hemingway did, transformed Victorian 'aesthetic death' into modern
'dirty death'. And he goes on to show how, through postmodern
fiction and AIDS narratives, death has once again become cultural
currency.
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