In this Book
Narrative Structures and the Language of the Self
Book
2010
Published by:
The Ohio State University Press
summary
Narrative Structures and the Language of the Self by Matthew Clark offers a new way of thinking about the interrelation of character and plot. Clark investigates the characters brought together in a narrative, considering them not as random collections but as structured sets that correspond to various manifestations of the self. The shape and structure of these sets can be thought of as narrative geometry, and various geometries imply various theories of the self. Part One, “Philosophical Fables of the Self,” examines narratives such as The Talented Mr. Ripley, A Farewell to Arms, A Separate Peace, and The Master of Ballantrae in order to show successively more complex versions of the self as modeled by Descartes, Hegel, Freud, and Mead. Part Two, “The Case of the Subject,” uses Case Grammar to extend the discussion to additional roles of the self in narratives such as The Waves, The Great Gatsby, Fifth Business, and Howards End as examples of the self as experiencer, the self as observer, the instrumental self, and the locative self. The book ends with an extended analysis of the subject in Hartley’s The Go-Between. Throughout, the discussion is concerned with practical analysis of specific narratives and with the development of an understanding of the self that moves beyond the simple dichotomy of the self and the other, the subject and the object.
Table of Contents
Cover
pp. 1-1
Title Page, Copyright
pp. 2-5
Contents
pp. v-vi
Acknowledgments
pp. vii-viii
Introduction: The Self and Narrative
pp. 1-10
Part One: Philosophical Fables of the Self
1. The Reflexive Self: Descartes and Ovid
pp. 13-26
2. The Furniture of the Self: Montaigne, Highsmith, Dostoevsky
pp. 27-43
3. The Dyadic Subject: Hegel, Aristophanes, Hemingway
pp. 44-63
4. Doubles and Doubled Doubles: Knowles and Austen
pp. 64-79
5. Freudian Thirds: Heinlein, Stevenson, Forster, Wharton
pp. 80-94
Part Two: The Case of the Subject
6. Introduction to Part Two: Deep Subjectivity
pp. 97-114
7. Agents, Patients, and Experiencers: le Carré, Weldon, Kesey, Woolf
pp. 115-129
8. Dative Subjects: Stevenson, Fitzgerald, Kesey, Robbe-Grillet
pp. 130-146
9. Instrumental Subjects: Knowles, Eliot, Davies
pp. 147-160
10. Locative Subjects: Mahfouz, Lem, Forster
pp. 161-178
Conclusion: Narrative and the Self: Hartley, Sartre, Ishiguro
pp. 179-192
Bibliography
pp. 193-202
Index
pp. 203-210
| ISBN | 9780814270950 |
|---|---|
| Related ISBN(s) | 9780814211281 |
| MARC Record | Download |
| OCLC | 868220214 |
| Pages | 209 |
| Launched on MUSE | 2014-01-01 |
| Language | English |
| Open Access | Yes |


