The Subject of Modernism: Narrative Alterations in the Fiction of Eliot, Conrad, Woolf, and JoyceUniversity of Michigan Press, 1994 - 209 páginas "Like other poststructuralist theories, Lacanian theory has long been accused of being ahistorical. In The Subject of Modernism, Tony E. Jackson combines a uniquely graspable explanation of the Lacanian theory of the self with a series of detailed psychoanalytic interpretations of actual texts to offer a new kind of literary history." "After exposing the seldom-discussed history of the self found in the work of Lacan, Jackson shows that the basic plot structure of realistic novels reveals an unconscious desire to preserve a certain kind of historically institutionalized self, but that the desire of realism to write the most real representation of reality steadily makes the self-preservation more difficult to sustain. Thus in following through on its own desire to prove the certainty of its being, realism eventually discovers its own impossibility. Jackson charts the resistances to and misrecognitions of this discovery as they are revealed in the changes of narrative form from Eliot's last, most ambitious novel, Daniel Deronda, through Conrad's most modernist novels, Lord Jim and Heart of Darkness, to Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway and The Waves. He ends with an appended consideration of the "Cyclops" and "Nausicaa" chapters from Joyces's Ulysses." "While other critics have argued that realism structures a certain self and modernism undoes that self, they have not attempted a historical explanation of why this change should have occurred. Jackson reads the emergence of modernism as a kind of generic self-analysis of realism, analogous to the self-analysis performed by Freud: when realism discovers the significance of its own desire to write the most real representation of reality, it has, in that moment, become modernism. It has grasped its own nature and so fully becomes itself, for the first time, as modernism." "The Subject of Modernism will appeal most obviously to readers of Victorian and modernist fiction, but it will also draw those interested in the history of the novel and in the idea of literary history in general. Finally, because of the way Jackson brings together fiction, psychoanalysis, and history, anyone interested in the history of aesthetics will find here new ways to examine particular art forms."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
Índice
Introduction | 1 |
From Kinds of History to Kinds of Reading to Kinds of Being | 15 |
Subjectivity à Lacan | 25 |
The Generic SelfRepresentation of Realism | 35 |
Readers and Readings in Daniel Deronda | 47 |
Sailors Readers and Muddied Mirrors in Lord Jim | 67 |
Naturalism and Unconsciousness in Heart of Darkness | 99 |
Metaphor Metonymy and the Subject of Mrs Dalloway | 113 |
The Waves and the Narrative of the Crisis in Narrative | 139 |
The Lack of Limit | 163 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
The Subject of Modernism: Narrative Alterations in the Fiction of Eliot ... Tony E. Jackson Vista de fragmentos - 1994 |
Términos y frases comunes
actual already appears becomes beginning brings certainty chapter character claims Clarissa comes consciousness conventional course culture Daniel death desire discourse earlier effect Eliot essential existence experience fact feels fiction figure final function give given Heart hero human idea Imaginary imagine impossibility individual interpretation Irish Jim's kind Lacan lack language least limit literary literature lived look Lord Jim Marlow meaning metaphor metonymic mirror modernism modernist move narrative narrator naturalist nature never notion novel object once opening particular past perhaps person pleasure principle plot position possible precisely present Press problem question reader reading realism reality relation remains represented romantic says seems seen sense Septimus signified simply situation speak specific story structure Symbolic takes telling temporality things thinking tion truth turn unconscious University wants Woolf writing written