The Spatiality of the Novel |
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Page 164
... Absalom , Absalom ! is contained here : the idea of the " negative state , ” the problematic nature of words , and especially the idea that tragedy is “ second - hand . " This is to say that the prevailing ethos of Absalom , Absalom ...
... Absalom , Absalom ! is contained here : the idea of the " negative state , ” the problematic nature of words , and especially the idea that tragedy is “ second - hand . " This is to say that the prevailing ethos of Absalom , Absalom ...
Page 167
... Absalom , Absalom ! is a novel about narrative and about novelistic method , then Faulkner's " sus- pensions " do not seem bizarre nor deliberately confusing , but rather the product of his intentional investigation of spatial ...
... Absalom , Absalom ! is a novel about narrative and about novelistic method , then Faulkner's " sus- pensions " do not seem bizarre nor deliberately confusing , but rather the product of his intentional investigation of spatial ...
Page 169
... Absalom , Absalom ! is dialogue , there is the most violent “ arrest " of time in a novel about the novel , an enunciation of the novelist's exploration of spatial reversibility as the crucial illusion enabling this temporal art to ...
... Absalom , Absalom ! is dialogue , there is the most violent “ arrest " of time in a novel about the novel , an enunciation of the novelist's exploration of spatial reversibility as the crucial illusion enabling this temporal art to ...
Common terms and phrases
Absalom Adam Bede aesthetic Andrey appears architectural artistic Balzac becomes Boris Eichenbaum central Cervantes chapter character characterization coextensive volume concept critical D. H. Lawrence declares Don Quixote Donatello dynamic field edition Eichenbaum element essay example existence experience Faulkner Fiction Figures Flaubert Frédéric function genidentic George Eliot Gérard Genette Gothic Hardy Hardy's Hawthorne Henry ibid idea important interpenetration interpretation Isabel James Jude the Obscure language literary Literature Magic Mountain Mann Marble Faun method Michel Butor Modification motifs narration narrative nature novel novelist object observes painting parallelism particularly perspective pictorial picture Poetics Portrait Praxiteles preface problem prose protagonist Proust reader reading relation rhythm Ricardou scene sculptural volume Sentimental Education sequence Shklovsky simultaneous space spatial arts spatial form spatial secondary illusion spiral statue Stephen Hero story structure Susanne Langer technique temporal art theory timeless tion Todorov Tolstoy trans Translated University Press Women in Love word writing York