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History, Politics, and the Novel (Paperback, New edition)
Loot Price: R1,363
Discovery Miles 13 630
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History, Politics, and the Novel (Paperback, New edition)
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Although history was once considered a component of the study of
literature, the two fields have grown steadily apart since the
sixteenth century. Today few literary theorists and critics study
history, and even fewer historians follow the work of their
colleagues in literature departments; instead, historians continue
to interpret the novel as literary critics and theorists did
several decades ago. Dominick LaCapra, an intellectual historian
well versed in literary theory and methodology, here addresses the
complex role of the novel in history and criticism, seeking to
establish a few guiding principles for the study of the historicity
of literature. LaCapra provides historically informed readings of
eight major modern novels: Stendhal's Red and Black, Dostoevsky's
Notes from Underground, Eliot's Middle-march, Flaubert's
Sentimental Education, Mann's Death in Venice and Doctor Faustus,
Woolf's To the Lighthouse, and Gaddis's The Recognitions. In each
reading, he explores the question of how the text relates to its
historical and literary contexts in symptomatic, critical, and
possibly transformative ways. Eschewing both a narrow
"intratextual" formalism and a reductive "extratextual"
historicism, he attempts to motivate the very selection of relevant
contexts for reading by drawing attention to the intellectual and
sociopolitical import of our exchange with the past. Throughout,
LaCapra consciously emulates the discursive strategy of these
novels, thereby reinforcing his assertion that historians have much
to learn from modes of discourse they have hitherto viewed as mere
documentary symptoms of the past. The work of a knowledgeable and
discerning scholar, this bold attempt to create a more engaging
dialogue between the past and present will be stimulating reading
for intellectual historians and literary theorists.
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