In this Book
- Flannery O'Connor's Dark Comedies: The Limits of Inference
- Book
- 2012
- Published by: Louisiana State University Press
In Flannery O'Connor's Dark Comedies, Carol Shloss moves from biographical, thematic, and theological approaches and instead focuses her criticism on the successes and failures of O'Connor as a rhetorician.
This valuable study of O'Connor's style uses reader-response theory to dissect the author's use of hyperbole, distortion, allusion, analogy, the dramatization of extreme religious experience, the manipulation of judgment through narrative voice, and direct address to the reader.
Schloss aims to return Flannery O'Connor to her readers on fathomable terms, to offer a rhetorical, rather than theological, perspective from which to understand the country preachers, square-jawed farm wives, wise rubes, foolish intellectuals, huckster Bible salesmen, killers, and other "good country people" who populate O'Connor's fiction.
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- p. ix
- Introduction
- pp. 1-8
- 2. The Writer's Sense of Audience
- pp. 21-37
- 3. Extensions of the Grotesque
- pp. 38-57
- 6. Epiphany
- pp. 102-123
- Conclusion: The Limits of Inference
- pp. 124-128
- Chronology of Flannery O'Connor's Fiction
- pp. 129-132
- Selected Bibliography
- pp. 145-152