Revising Life Through Literature: Dialogical Change from the Reformation Through PostmodernismScarecrow Press, 2006 - 187 pàgines After the Reformation, science superseded both religion and literature as the favored source of knowledge. As people became free of a catechism of rote responses, they found the concept of self-determination both liberating and terrifying. Literature stepped in by providing examples of fictional characters that made choices in circumstances similar to the quandaries faced by readers--situations that could not be easily resolved by scripture alone. As a critical theory, dialogism makes our literary heritage germane. It offers a strategy for readers to improve their immediate lives through literary insights. It also offers a means to employ literary theory to reveal overlooked clues and lingering inhibitions embedded in past literature that can affect the reader's present life. In Revising Life Through Literature: Dialogical Change from the Reformation through Postmodernism, Joyce Brotton cites topical examples of the past several centuries to argue the relevancy of literary works to everyday existence. Each chapter opens with a philosophical background that identifies conflict arising from a dichotomy between religion and science, followed by a literary discussion of works that respond to the needs of that age. Included in her discussion are King Lear, The Duchess of Malfi, Paradise Lost, Candide, Wuthering Heights, and Adam Bede. More recent examples include James Joyce's Ulysses, John Fowles' The French Lieutenant's Woman, Julian Barnes' The History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters, and Margaret Atwood's The Blind Assassin. This book is more than a teaching vehicle; it focuses on the parallel power of the imagination to create situations that may not reflect exactly the reader's own needs, but can boost confidence by offering a range of options for coping with life. This absorbing, entertaining, and informative resource encourages readers to use literature for relevancy rather than as a mere distraction. |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 6.
Pàgina 44
... hero ( Adam ) who was defeated . Dryden anticipated William Blake when in 1697 he denied that Paradise Lost could be classified as a heroic poem because Satan , not Adam , was Milton's hero . Contemporary critics of Paradise Lost ...
... hero ( Adam ) who was defeated . Dryden anticipated William Blake when in 1697 he denied that Paradise Lost could be classified as a heroic poem because Satan , not Adam , was Milton's hero . Contemporary critics of Paradise Lost ...
Pàgina 46
... hero capable of making human beings feel secure in God's plan . Instead , the bland Christ of Paradise Regained seems to emphasize the frailty of human existence . Milton had bravely faced great risk to carry out what he thought was ...
... hero capable of making human beings feel secure in God's plan . Instead , the bland Christ of Paradise Regained seems to emphasize the frailty of human existence . Milton had bravely faced great risk to carry out what he thought was ...
Pàgina 125
... hero of Joyce's Ulysses by avoiding loss to himself , pro- viding gain to others , and bringing " light to the gentiles " ( 676 ) . Joyce is a modernist in his attempt to create acceptance and value in contempo- rary life by comparing ...
... hero of Joyce's Ulysses by avoiding loss to himself , pro- viding gain to others , and bringing " light to the gentiles " ( 676 ) . Joyce is a modernist in his attempt to create acceptance and value in contempo- rary life by comparing ...
Continguts
Contents | 1 |
A Worldview Shattered | 18 |
John Webster | 34 |
Copyright | |
No s’hi han mostrat 10 seccions
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Revising Life Through Literature: Dialogical Change from the Reformation ... Joyce D. Brotton Visualització de fragments - 2006 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
accepted Adam Bede advocated allusions Arnold authentic authority Bakhtin behavior believed biblical Blind Assassin Bosola Brontë Candide Catherine characters Charles Taylor choices Church concept Copernicus created Darwin death depicted Descartes dialogue divine doctrine Duchess Duchess of Malfi earth eighteenth century ethical evolutionary existence faith fiction Gadamer George Eliot God's Hans-Georg Gadamer happiness Heathcliff Hermeneutics hierarchy human Hume identity imaginative individual interpretation Iris John Johnson Joyce Julian Barnes Kernan knowledge Laura Lear literary modernism literature live Lyell's meaning Mikhail Bakhtin Milton modernist moral natural law natural religion nineteenth nineteenth-century novel Orestes Paradise Lost Paradise Regained past philosophers poem poetry postmodern literature postmodernism present Rasselas reader reason reflected religious represented revealed Revolution Sartre scientific scripture seems sense seventeenth century Shakespeare social species spiritual T. S. Eliot Tennyson theory tion tradition trans University Press Unless otherwise specified Webster Wordsworth writing Wuthering Heights York