Criar uma Loja Virtual Grátis
Read ebook Proust, Pastiche, and the Postmodern : Or Why Style Matters DOC, DJV

9781611486926
English

1611486920
Proust, Pastiche, and the Postmodern, or Why Style Matters argues against the traditional view that Marcel Proust wrote pastiches, that is, texts that imitate the style of another author, to master his literary predecessors while sharpening his writerly quill. On the contrary, James F. Austin demonstrates that Proust s oeuvre, and In Search of Lost Time in particular, deploy pastiche to other ends: Proust s pastiches, in fact, do things with words to create powerful real-world effects. His works are indeed performative acts that forge social relationships, redefine our ideas of literature, and even work against oppressive political and economic discourses. Building on the speech-act theory of J.L. Austin, Jacques Derrida, and J. Hillis Miller, and on the postmodern theory of Fredric Jameson, this book not only elucidates the performative nature of pastiche, but also shows that the famous Goncourt pastiche from In Search of Lost Time has attracted so much attention because it already attained the postmodern; that is, it eliminated temporal depth and experience, transforming time itself into a nostalgic style of an era, and into the sort of aestheticized surface that came to define postmodernism decades later. To reflect this transformation of pastiche, this work rearticulates its history in France around Proust. Reconfiguring a scholastic, classically-inspired pedagogical tradition based on imitation, and breaking with the dominant satirical practice, Proust s work opened up possibilities in the 20th century for a new kind of pastiche: playful and performative in the literary field, and postmodern in a French cinema that, as with the Goncourt pastiche, represents time as the visual style of an era, whether unreflexively in heritage films such as Regis Wargnier s Indochine, or discerningly in Eric Rohmer s Lady and the Duke, which uses period pictorial and painterly conventions to illustrate how the representation of history onscreen typically flattens time into style."

Read online Proust, Pastiche, and the Postmodern : Or Why Style Matters by James F. Austin in MOBI, PDF

He does so with meticulous research, engaging narrative, and sensitivity for his subject, shedding light and blood along the way., From Finland to Newfoundland and Jelling to Jerusalem, follow in the wake of the Vikings--a transformative story of a people that begins with paganism and ends in Christendom.Each day I pledge to save a hundred lives.The New Yorker" In "Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight, " Alexandra Fuller remembers her African childhood with visceral authenticity.As these two unforgettable characters try to bring their different worlds together, Hodgman reveals the challenges of Betty's life and his own struggle for self-respect, moving readers from their small town--crumbling but still colorful--to the star-studded corridors of Vanity Fair.But did Hamlet really see a ghost, or did he just imagine it?Now, many years later, estranged by an apparent betrayal as profound as their family's dysfunction, the two live separate lives, Peter as an editor in New York, Wendy as an edgy sports photographer with a taste for risk.