Centers of Consciousness: Protagonis...
Clark, Anna Elizabeth.

 

  • Centers of Consciousness: Protagonism and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel.
  • 紀錄類型: 書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
    書名/作者: Centers of Consciousness: Protagonism and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel.
    作者: Clark, Anna Elizabeth.
    面頁冊數: 235 p.
    附註: Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 75-02(E), Section: A.
    Contained By: Dissertation Abstracts International75-02A(E).
    標題: Literature, Modern.
    標題: Literature, English.
    ISBN: 9781303527807
    摘要、提要註: Since Aristotle, we have categorized characters in terms of relative quantity and proportion. From Henry James's "center of consciousness," to E. M. Forster's theory of "round" and "flat," to Deidre Lynch's "pragmatics of character," to Alex Woloch's influential "one versus many," scaled distinctions between "major" and "minor" characters have remained unchallenged since the Poetics. Yet such classifications don't capture the ways characters claim amounts of interest and consequence that are disproportionate to their textual presence. My book counters these approaches to character by calling attention to how novels concisely render the rich interior fullness of even very minor figures. While literary critics associate representations of consciousness with major characters, I demonstrate that, through the application of narrative techniques such as first-person narration and focalization, the limited amounts of text allotted to minor characters can yield brief flashes of depth. These depictions of consciousness may lack the "exhaustive presentation" that Ian Watt claims is inherent to the novel, but they are nonetheless brimming with the personality and specificity critics typically associate with central characters. Indeed, many canonical novels, especially those of literary realism's highpoint in nineteenth-century Britain, resist the character hierarchy implied by distinctions such as major and minor. In addition to manifest examples such as Wilkie Collins's "experiment" with many narrators in The Woman in White (1859), we can count instances in which the centrality of a major character is disrupted or challenged. From Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818), where the title character's initial prominence is undermined by his creature's arresting autobiography, to George Eliot's Daniel Deronda (1876), in which readerly affections are split between a Jewish hero, an egoistic heroine, and a narrator's attempt to relate "everything" to "everything else," novels that are far from generic outliers fit uneasily into scaled models of characterization, even when their titles and critics imply otherwise. By recuperating the significance of representations of minor characters' consciousnesses, I argue that such novels disrupt the impulse for sustained identification with a single exceptional perspective, directing attention towards characters who might otherwise appear nondescript, inscrutable, threatening, or even inhuman.
    電子資源: http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3601493
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