Reading narrative discourse : studies in the novel from Cervantes to Beckett

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Reading narrative discourse : studies in the novel from Cervantes to Beckett

Andrew Gibson

Macmillan, 1990

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The author of this study takes issue with the neo-Aristotelian assumptions underlying most work on the novel. He argues that the more distinctive forms of narrative have frequently been misread. In the first instance, they may be best understood at the level of narrative discourse itself, rather than as representations of a world. Gibson draws on Nietzsche, Bakhtin, Genette and a range of modern theories of narrative to provide a basis for reading the more unusual forms of fiction in terms of their own specific logic.

Table of Contents

  • "Don Quixote"
  • "Clarissa"
  • "Tristram Shandy"
  • the "Eumaeus" episode in "Ulysses"
  • "The Trial" and "The Castle"
  • Henry Green's novels
  • Beckett from "Assumption" to "The Unnamable".

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