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Emma Bond 
Disrupted Narratives 
Illness, Silence and Identity in Svevo, Pressburger and Morandini

Apoio
If Madame Bovary”s death in Flaubert”s 1857 novel marked the definitive end of the Romantic vision of literary disease, then the advent of psychoanalysis less than half a century later heralded an entirely new set of implications for literature dealing with illness. The theorization of a potential unconscious double (capable of expressing the body, and thus also the intimate damage caused by disease) in turn suggested a capacity to subvert or destabilize the text, exposing the main thread of the narrative to be unreliable or self-conscious. Indeed, the authors examined in this study (Italo Svevo (1861-1928), Giorgio Pressburger (1937-) and Giuliana Morandini (1938-)) all make use of individual ”infected” or suppressed voices within their texts which unfold through illness to cast doubt on a more (conventionally) dominant narrative standpoint. Applying the theories of Freud and more recent writings by Julia Kristeva, Bond offers a new critical reading of the literary function of illness, a function related to the very nature of narration itself.
€50.25
Métodos de Pagamento
Formato PDF ● Páginas 198 ● ISBN 9781351569354 ● Editora Taylor and Francis ● Publicado 2017 ● Carregável 3 vezes ● Moeda EUR ● ID 5326209 ● Proteção contra cópia Adobe DRM
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