Faulkner's Subject: A Cosmos No One OwnsCambridge University Press, 29 mai 1992 - 181 pages Faulkner's Subject offers a reading of William Faulkner for our time, and does so by rethinking his masterpieces through the lenses of current critical theory. The book attends equally to the power of his work and to the current theoretical issues that would call that power into question. Drawing on poststructuralist, ideological, and gender theory, Weinstein examines the harrowing process of "becoming oneself" at the heart of these novels. This self is always male, and it achieves focus only through strategically mystifying or marginalizing women and blacks. The cosmos he called his own--the textual world he produced, of which he would be "sole owner and proprietor"--merges as a cosmos no one owns, a verbal territory also generated (and biased) by the larger culture's discourses of gender and race. Like personal identity itself, it is a cosmos no one owns. |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-5 sur 37
Page 1
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Page 2
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Page 2
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Page 2
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Page 15
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
Absalom activities American appears argues articulate authority Beauchamp become blood body calls canonical chapter characters Christmas claim comes Compson course critical culture culture's desire discourse emerges encounter enter experience explores father Faulkner Faulknerian feel female fiction figures finally Fury gender hand human identity ideological imagined individual insistence language later less Light in August lives looked Lucas Lucas's male materials mean mind Moses mother move narrative narrator natural never nigger norms novel object once passage play position practices produced Quentin question race racial reader reading refusal registers relation remains representation reveals rhetoric role scene scripts seek seems sense sexual share social Sound Southern space speak story suggests Sutpen Symbolic things tion turn University voice woman women writes