The Question of Justice in the Novel of Consciousness
نام عام مواد
[Article]
نام نخستين پديدآور
Michael Vander Weele
وضعیت نشر و پخش و غیره
محل نشرو پخش و غیره
Leiden
نام ناشر، پخش کننده و غيره
Brill
یادداشتهای مربوط به خلاصه یا چکیده
متن يادداشت
Marilynne Robinson's achievement in the third novel of the Iowa trilogy can be seen more clearly if measured against Erich Auerbach's ambivalence about the novel of consciousness. Using Auerbach's final chapter of Mimesis, on Virginia Woolf, as the horizon for Robinson's work clarifies two points: Robinson's work should be viewed within a novel-of-consciousness tradition that is as much European as American; and Robinson's religious interests turn that tradition toward a more anthropological concern with the complexity of consciousness framed by the concern for justice. While Nicholas Damas's recent essay in The Atlantic, "The New Fiction of Solitude" (April 2016), claimed that much new fiction "imagines teaching us how to be separate" and Walter Benjamin already wrote at mid-century that "the ability to exchange experiences" disappeared sometime after World War I, in Lila it is as if Marilynne Robinson set out to show both the difficulty and the possibilities of such exchange.
مجموعه
تاريخ نشر
2020
توصيف ظاهري
148-173
عنوان
Religion and the Arts
شماره جلد
24/1-2
شماره استاندارد بين المللي پياييندها
1568-5292
اصطلاحهای موضوعی کنترل نشده
اصطلاح موضوعی
Art History
اصطلاح موضوعی
Auerbach
اصطلاح موضوعی
Calvin
اصطلاح موضوعی
Comparative Religion & Religious Studies
اصطلاح موضوعی
exchange
اصطلاح موضوعی
History
اصطلاح موضوعی
justice
اصطلاح موضوعی
Novel of Consciousness
اصطلاح موضوعی
Religious Studies
اصطلاح موضوعی
Robinson
اصطلاح موضوعی
Woolf
نام شخص به منزله سر شناسه - (مسئولیت معنوی درجه اول )