Fr. 80.50

Dialect of the Tribe - Speech and Community in Modern Fiction

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext An often brilliant study. Klappentext The bold careers of Henry James, D.H. Lawrence, James Joyce, and Samuel Beckett--writers with profoundly unsettled cultural identities--spark Margery Sabin's investigation of values carried through inherited forms of speech. The Dialect of the Tribe offers fresh readings of such great novelsas The Golden Bowl, Women in Love, Ulysses, and the Beckett trilogy which illustrate how complex attitudes toward the speech forms of language inform the most varied social, psychological, and aesthetic structures in modern fiction. Sabin explores the powerful tension in these writers betweenappreciation for the resources of common speech in English and contrary longings for a freedom associated with abstraction, system, and foreign or private language. Her own critical procedures transcend restrictive and reductive polarizations, as she lucidly analyzes the biases of both theAnglo-American critical tradition and the challenge to that tradition in French literary theory and practice. Written in a jargon-free, accessible style, The Dialect of the Tribe argues that the ambiguous cultural positions of the great modern novelists in English emerge as a major source of theirstrength--the rich traditions of the English language give enlivening power to writers also remarkable for their drive toward radical independence and skepticism. Zusammenfassung Through fresh readings of novels by James! Lawrence! Joyce! and Beckett! the author shows how complex attitudes towards the speech forms of language inform the most varied social! psychological! and aesthetic structures in modern fiction.

Product details

Authors Margery Sabin, Margery (Professor of English Sabin
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 07.05.1987
 
EAN 9780195041538
ISBN 978-0-19-504153-8
No. of pages 320
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative literary studies

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