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Novel Practices - Classic Modern Fiction (Paperback)
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Novel Practices - Classic Modern Fiction (Paperback)
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An important debate in modern literary criticism concerns the exact
relationship between the ancient epic and the novel. Both the epic
and the most ambitious modern novels are large-scale attempts to
present a comprehensive view of the world through the experience of
a representative hero. However, in the older tradition the hero
stood for the aspirations and highest ideals of his society. The
protagonist of the modern novel is usually at odds with that
society, whether as exile, active rebel, or antagonistic critic. In
Novel Practices, the distinguished literary scholar Eugene
Goodheart surveys a representative selection of modern novelists
tracing how the epic impulse has been reshaped under the conditions
of modernity.Goodheart describes how George Eliot and James Joyce's
comprehensive artistic creation enabled them to demonstrate a
mastery of the world unattainable to their thwarted, flawed, or
feckless heroes and heroines. Works such as Middlemarch and
Ulysses, encyclopedic in their inclusiveness, share an ambitious
scope that is virtually synonymous with epic. Goodheart shows that
even in shorter works, such as James's The Beast in the Jungle and
Ford Maddox Ford's The Good Soldier, the standard of the epic hero
acts as an ironic subtext. A chapter on Thomas Mann provides a
European perspective, enacting conflict between self and society
through a dramatized contest of ideas. Goodheart explores
ambiguities of point of view as characteristic of modern
uncertainty: how much authority or reliability should the reader
concede to the narrator? What is the relationship between the
narrator and the author? These and related questions are addressed
in chapters on Lawrence, James, Bellow, Woolf, and Roth, which also
deal with the place of literary biography in understanding
fiction.Goodheart's approach centers on fiction, and although he
takes cognizance of the critical theory of the past several
decades, he nevertheless emphasizes the centrality of the author
and authorial intention. Novel Practices will be essential reading
for students of literature, culture, and intellectual history.
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