Fairy tales,modernisms and grotesqueries: The art of Virginia Woolf,Djuna Barnes and Ingeborg Bachmann.
详细信息   
  • 作者:Heney ; Alison Lynn.
  • 学历:Ph.D.
  • 年:2011
  • 导师:Pavlovskis-Petit, Zoja,eadvisorBrinker-Gabler, Giselaecommittee memberGaddis-Rose, Marilynecommittee memberLevinson, Brettecommittee memberTucker, Elizabethecommittee member
  • 毕业院校:State University of New York
  • Department:Comparative Literature
  • ISBN:9781124780900
  • CBH:3465721
  • Country:USA
  • 语种:English
  • FileSize:1056447
  • Pages:261
文摘
Through a close, comparative consideration of three novels, Virginia Woolfs To the Lighthouse, Djuna Barnes Nightwood and Ingeborg Bachmanns Malina, this project examines the evolving form and function of the fairy tale in modernist literature and underscores the centrality of imagination to modernist forms of fiction that explore aesthetic, social and political issues such as the failure of language, spiritual bankruptcy and the construction of memory. In chapter one, I argue that Woolf, Barnes and Bachmanns invocation of the fairy tale can be read as a mode of the Fantastic and one that insists on the mutability of symbolic structures and the imaginations intimate tie to language. Such a reading goes beyond an understanding of the fairy tale as a moment of singular allusion to an emphasis on the fairy tales role in the modern artists ambivalent drive for aesthetic recompense; a technique used by the authors to reveal how the processes of imagination can sometimes be stained with the monumentalizing ideology of patriarchy, fascism and primitivism. In chapter two, I focus on the ways in which the fairy tale performs, resists and encapsulates various aspects of the readers reality, history and memory by manipulating time within the novel; a method that challenges the terror of loss through arresting metaphors of past time and functions as an uncanny space for untold memory in fiction. And in chapter three, I argue that this re-visioning of time invited by the fairytale subsequently cultivates a uniquely liminal space and a fantastic constellation of figures whose grotesque manifestations invoke the aesthetics of transgression, tension and violence in addition to the modernist hope for liberation, transformation, and transcendence. Understood in this way, the study of the fairy tale allusion in modernist literature evolves into a meditation on the fairy tale, specifically, and oral culture, more generally, as a modality and on its alignment with the grotesque and the public square as the attempt by the artist to re-envision not just what it says, but what the fairy tale can do.
NGLC 2004-2010.National Geological Library of China All Rights Reserved.
Add:29 Xueyuan Rd,Haidian District,Beijing,PRC. Mail Add: 8324 mailbox 100083
For exchange or info please contact us via email.