Thomas Hardy, Monism and the Carnival Tradition: The One and the Many in The Dynasts

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University of Toronto Press, 1. 1. 2002. - 255 страница

In this original and scrupulously researched book, G. Glen Wickens offers a new reading of a work which is often ignored by critics and students of Victorian literature, Thomas Hardy's The Dynasts. Wickens explores the monistic viewpoint of The Dynasts through reference to 19th and early 20th philosophical writings which have never before been applied to Hardy's philosophy. Using insights derived from the critical theory of Mikhail Bakhtin - in particular his concept of carnival - Wickens also counters the usual view of The Dynasts as failed epic or tragedy, and instead situates the work as a novel within the serio-comical genres. In doing so, he brings out new, violent implications to Bakhtin's theory of laughter and carnival.

Thomas Hardy, Monism, and the Carnival Tradition is the first book-length study of Thomas Hardy's The Dynasts since 1977. It will be of interest to Hardy scholars, critics of Bakhtin, and to readers interested in monist philosophy or nineteenth century history.

 

Садржај

Hardys Longest Novel and the Monistic
3
The Wills Official Spirit
28
Unconscious or Superconscious?
58
A Carnivalesque Picture of Carnival
121
Heroism Speech Zones and Genres
145
The Crowds of War
169
Chronotopes and the DeathBirth of a World
194
Hardy and Bakhtin
216
Notes
223
Works Cited
235
Index
247
Ауторска права

Чести термини и фразе

О аутору (2002)

G. Glen Wickens is a professor in the Department of English, Bishop's University.

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