Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead
Couldn't load pickup availability
The Limits of Narrative
Essays on Baudelaire, Flaubert, Rimbaud and Mallarme
This book examines the problematic area of narrative structure under conditions of severe stress.
Nathaniel Wing (Author)
9780521114158, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 18 June 2009
168 pages
21.6 x 14 x 1 cm, 0.22 kg
This book examines the problematic area of narrative structure under conditions of severe stress. Each of the four authors is shown to be concerned with the tension between narrative coherence as a desirable goal and an unfortunate check placed on the 'free' play of fantasy. This tension produces powerful disruptions of literary form in the lyric (Baudelaire, Mallarmé), prose poetry (Baudelaire, Rimbaud) and the novel (Flaubert) which are examined here. A final chapter draws out some of the historical implications of these readings in a discussion of Baudelaire's and Flaubert's trials for obscenity and of Marx's writings on France from 1848 to 1871. Professor Wing demonstrates that all these texts retain an unstable balance between earlier modes of thought, feeling and expression and the depersonal, fragmented modern text. He revises notions of modernity and invites us to reconsider traces of earlier forms of writing in more canonically modern texts.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. The Danaides Vessel: on reading Baudelaire's allegories
2. On certain relations: figures of sexuality in Baudelaire
3. Emma's stories: narrative, repetition and desire in Madame Bovary
4. The autobiography of rhetoric: on reading Rimbaud's Une Saison en enfer
5. False confusions: ficitons of masculine desire in Mallarmé's 'L'Aprés-midi d'un faune'
6. The trials of authority under Louis Bonaparte
Notes
Index.
Subject Areas: Literary studies: general [DSB]
