The dialogic sign : essays on the major novels of Dostoevsky

書誌事項

The dialogic sign : essays on the major novels of Dostoevsky

David K. Danow

(Middlebury studies in Russian language and literature, vol. 2)

P. Lang, c1991

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [215]-219)

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Employing an innovative series of related analytic models, The Dialogic Sign treats the four major novels (Crime and Punishement, The Idiot, The Possessed, and The Brothers Karamazov) of the great nineteenth-century Russian prose writer, F.M. Dostoevsky. The purpose of the book is to explore what makes Dostoevsky's writing distinctive not only within the sphere of Russian letters but also within the global context of world literature. The book articulates the novelist's striking reliance on absence (of direct speech; of a major character) to evoke, paradoxically, a profoundly felt presence. It discusses the writer's use of minimal narrative forms in deploying elaborate internal modeling systems within the greater narrative (The Brothers Karamazov). Drawing principally upon the thought of Mikhail Bakhtin, the twentieth-century Russian literary theorist and philosopher of dialogue, The Dialogic Sign elaborates features of Dostoevskian dialogue that account for its extraordinary dynamic and dramatic quality.

目次

Contents: This book elaborates features of Dostoevsky's highly distinctive narrative art. These include his striking use of nonverbal strategies within dialogic structures, the creation of a poetics of absence, the deployment of elaborate internal modeling systems yielding a dialogic thematics, and his generating a text by means of these systems.

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