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Permanent Liminality and Modernity - Analysing the Sacrificial Carnival through Novels (Hardcover)
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Permanent Liminality and Modernity - Analysing the Sacrificial Carnival through Novels (Hardcover)
Series: Contemporary Liminality
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This book offers a comprehensive sociological study of the nature
and dynamics of the modern world, through the use of a series of
anthropological concepts, including the trickster, schismogenesis,
imitation and liminality. Developing the view that with the theatre
playing a central role, the modern world is conditioned as much by
cultural processes as it is by economic, technological or
scientific ones, the author contends the world is, to a
considerable extent, theatrical - a phenomenon experienced as
inauthenticity or a loss of direction and meaning. As such the
novel is revealed as a means for studying our theatricalised
reality, not simply because novels can be understood to be likening
the world to theatre, but because they effectively capture and
present the reality of a world that has been thoroughly
'theatricalised' - and they do so more effectively than the main
instruments usually employed to analyse reality: philosophy and
sociology. With analyses of some of the most important novelists
and novels of modern culture, including Rilke, Hofmannsthal, Kafka,
Mann, Blixen, Broch and Bulgakov, and focusing on fin-de-siecle
Vienna as a crucial 'threshold' chronotope of modernity, Permanent
Liminality and Modernity demonstrates that all seek to investigate
and unmask the theatricalisation of modern life, with its
progressive loss of meaning and our deteriorating capacity to
distinguish between what is meaningful and what is artificial.
Drawing on the work of Nietzsche, Bakhtin and Girard to examine the
ways in which novels explore the reduction of human existence to a
state of permanent liminality, in the form of a sacrificial
carnival, this book will appeal to scholars of social,
anthropological and literary theory.
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