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Wygnańcy, wyrzutcy, nieznajomi: ikony marginalizacji po II wojnie światowej Narra–
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Znajduje się w: Fairfield, Ohio, Stany Zjednoczone
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Parametry przedmiotu
- Stan
- ISBN-13
- 9781623563547
- Book Title
- Exiles, Outcasts, Strangers
- ISBN
- 9781623563547
- Publication Year
- 2013
- Type
- Textbook
- Format
- Trade Paperback
- Language
- English
- Publication Name
- Exiles, Outcasts, Strangers : Icons of Marginalization in Post World War II Narrative
- Item Height
- 0.4in
- Item Length
- 9.2in
- Publisher
- Bloomsbury Academic & Professional
- Item Width
- 6.1in
- Item Weight
- 10.8 Oz
- Number of Pages
- 208 Pages
O tym produkcie
Product Information
Exiles, Outcasts, Strangers explores how nine different "outsider" authors treat the theme of alienation in one of their major works. All the novels under review were written in a limited time span (1942 to 1987, approximately 50 years), and all are structured around a hero or heroine who remains culturally, ethically or aesthetically distant from his/her narrative counterparts. Works discussed: Albert Camus' L'Etranger; Richard Wright's The Outsider; André Langevin's Poussière sur la ville; Ernesto Sábato's El túnel; V.S. Naipaul's Guerrillas; Elie Wiesel's Le Cinquième fils; Norbert Zongo's Le Parachutage; Gisèle Pineau's L'Exil selon Julia, and Jean Genet's Querelle de Brest.
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Bloomsbury Academic & Professional
ISBN-10
1623563542
ISBN-13
9781623563547
eBay Product ID (ePID)
160033822
Product Key Features
Publication Name
Exiles, Outcasts, Strangers : Icons of Marginalization in Post World War II Narrative
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Publication Year
2013
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
208 Pages
Dimensions
Item Length
9.2in
Item Height
0.4in
Item Width
6.1in
Item Weight
10.8 Oz
Additional Product Features
Reviews
"The place of the margins in literary discourse stands prominently as a fulcrum of inquiry among twentieth-century writers and contemporary literary scholars. Twentieth-century prose seeks explicitly to forge and sustain a fundamental distance from the 'center,' which appears both as anathema to contemporary writers and which does not fairly bespeak the predominant vision of l'humaine condition. Within such a frame, Dr. Muratore's masterful study of otherness brings stunning insights and new dimensions to the complex, forever unresolved problematic of alienation, marginalization and apartness. The critic illuminates the work of nine post-World War II novelists-each, by dint of circumstance or destiny, culturally apart, each singularly estranged, and, more compellingly, each the creator of a fictionalized universe in which the protagonist confronts the essence of unhinged lost-ness. Muratore thus offers sophisticated and far-reaching analyses and accompanies the reader on an intriguing series of journeys, each borne of 'difference,' yet powerfully unified. The literary dances are highly compelling as the book explores that muted but ever-present part of our human prejudice-otherness-from the perspectives of those on the fringes. Muratore explores the phenomenon with forensic expertise and vigor of thought. Clearly, every reader can relate to the face in the mirror staring back through the haze of self-recognition and the ignominy of attempting to conjure up a panacea for an intractable matter." -- Bethel Erastus-Obilo, Vice President of Academic Affairs and Research, University of Atlanta, USA, 'Readers interested in one of these writers will find something interesting in her analysis. The book has extensive notes a good bibliography. Collections with strong holdings in comparative literature and post colonialism will find this slender book a useful...acquisition.'-Choice Magazine, "The place of the margins in literary discourse stands prominently as a fulcrum of inquiry among twentieth-century writers and contemporary literary scholars. Twentieth-century prose seeks explicitly to forge and sustain a fundamental distance from the 'center,' which appears both as anathema to contemporary writers and which does not fairly bespeak the predominant vision of l'humaine condition. Within such a frame, Dr. Muratore's masterful study of otherness brings stunning insights and new dimensions to the complex, forever unresolved problematic of alienation, marginalization and apartness. The critic illuminates the work of nine post-World War II novelists--each, by dint of circumstance or destiny, culturally apart, each singularly estranged, and, more compellingly, each the creator of a fictionalized universe in which the protagonist confronts the essence of unhinged lost-ness. Muratore thus offers sophisticated and far-reaching analyses and accompanies the reader on an intriguing series of journeys, each borne of 'difference,' yet powerfully unified. The literary dances are highly compelling as the book explores that muted but ever-present part of our human prejudice--otherness--from the perspectives of those on the fringes. Muratore explores the phenomenon with forensic expertise and vigor of thought. Clearly, every reader can relate to the face in the mirror staring back through the haze of self-recognition and the ignominy of attempting to conjure up a panacea for an intractable matter." -- Bethel Erastus-Obilo, Vice President of Academic Affairs and Research, University of Atlanta, USA "Muratore's work, written with polish and flair, offers an alternate theory of reading, and does so with clarity and depth, void of the convolutions to which we are too often exposed. The critic wields a study of estrangement in numerous texts, while establishing a bond of immediacy with the reader. A stunning discourse of and about textual difference!" -- Jack Jordan, Professor and Department Head, Department of Classical & Modern Languages and Literatures, Mississippi State University, USA "'Readers interested in one of these writers will find something interesting in her analysis. The book has extensive notes a good bibliography. Collections with strong holdings in comparative literature and post colonialism will find this slender book a useful...acquisition.'" -- Choice Magazine, 'Readers interested in one of these writers will find something interesting in her analysis. The book has extensive notes a good bibliography. Collections with strong holdings in comparative literature and post colonialism will find this slender book a useful...acquisition.', "The place of the margins in literary discourse stands prominently as a fulcrum of inquiry among twentieth-century writers and contemporary literary scholars. Twentieth-century prose seeks explicitly to forge and sustain a fundamental distance from the 'center,' which appears both as anathema to contemporary writers and which does not fairly bespeak the predominant vision of l'humaine condition. Within such a frame, Dr. Muratore's masterful study of otherness brings stunning insights and new dimensions to the complex, forever unresolved problematic of alienation, marginalization and apartness. The critic illuminates the work of nine post-World War II novelists-each, by dint of circumstance or destiny, culturally apart, each singularly estranged, and, more compellingly, each the creator of a fictionalized universe in which the protagonist confronts the essence of unhinged lost-ness. Muratore thus offers sophisticated and far-reaching analyses and accompanies the reader on an intriguing series of journeys, each borne of 'difference,' yet powerfully unified. The literary dances are highly compelling as the book explores that muted but ever-present part of our human prejudice-otherness-from the perspectives of those on the fringes. Muratore explores the phenomenon with forensic expertise and vigor of thought. Clearly, every reader can relate to the face in the mirror staring back through the haze of self-recognition and the ignominy of attempting to conjure up a panacea for an intractable matter." -- Bethel Erastus-Obilo, Vice President of Academic Affairs and Research, University of Atlanta, USA "Muratore's work, written with polish and flair, offers an alternate theory of reading, and does so with clarity and depth, void of the convolutions to which we are too often exposed. The critic wields a study of estrangement in numerous texts, while establishing a bond of immediacy with the reader. A stunning discourse of and about textual difference!" --Jack Jordan, Professor and Department Head, Department of Classical & Modern Languages and Literatures, Mississippi State University, USA 'Readers interested in one of these writers will find something interesting in her analysis. The book has extensive notes a good bibliography. Collections with strong holdings in comparative literature and post colonialism will find this slender book a useful...acquisition.'-Choice Magazine, "Muratore's work, written with polish and flair, offers an alternate theory of reading, and does so with clarity and depth, void of the convolutions to which we are too often exposed. The critic wields a study of estrangement in numerous texts, while establishing a bond of immediacy with the reader. A stunning discourse of and about textual difference!" --Jack Jordan, Professor and Department Head, Department of Classical & Modern Languages and Literatures, Mississippi State University, USA, 'Readers interested in one of these writers will find something interesting in her analysis. The book has extensive notes a good bibliography. Collections with strong holdings in comparative literature and post colonialism will find this slender book a useful...acquisition.'--Choice Magazine, "Muratore's work, written with polish and flair, offers an alternate theory of reading, and does so with clarity and depth, void of the convolutions to which we are too often exposed. The critic wields a study of estrangement in numerous texts, while establishing a bond of immediacy with the reader. A stunning discourse of and about textual difference!" -Jack Jordan, Professor and Department Head, Department of Classical & Modern Languages and Literatures, Mississippi State University, USA, "The place of the margins in literary discourse stands prominently as a fulcrum of inquiry among twentieth-century writers and contemporary literary scholars. Twentieth-century prose seeks explicitly to forge and sustain a fundamental distance from the 'center,' which appears both as anathema to contemporary writers and which does not fairly bespeak the predominant vision of l'humaine condition. Within such a frame, Dr. Muratore's masterful study of otherness brings stunning insights and new dimensions to the complex, forever unresolved problematic of alienation, marginalization and apartness. The critic illuminates the work of nine post-World War II novelists-each, by dint of circumstance or destiny, culturally apart, each singularly estranged, and, more compellingly, each the creator of a fictionalized universe in which the protagonist confronts the essence of unhinged lost-ness. Muratore thus offers sophisticated and far-reaching analyses and accompanies the reader on an intriguing series of journeys, each borne of 'difference,' yet powerfully unified. The literary dances are highly compelling as the book explores that muted but ever-present part of our human prejudice-otherness-from the perspectives of those on the fringes. Muratore explores the phenomenon with forensic expertise and vigor of thought. Clearly, every reader can relate to the face in the mirror staring back through the haze of self-recognition and the ignominy of attempting to conjure up a panacea for an intractable matter." -- Bethel Erastus-Obilo, Vice President of Academic Affairs and Research, University of Atlanta, USA "Muratore's work, written with polish and flair, offers an alternate theory of reading, and does so with clarity and depth, void of the convolutions to which we are too often exposed. The critic wields a study of estrangement in numerous texts, while establishing a bond of immediacy with the reader. A stunning discourse of and about textual difference!" --Jack Jordan, Professor and Department Head, Department of Classical & Modern Languages and Literatures, Mississippi State University, USA 'Readers interested in one of these writers will find something interesting in her analysis. The book has extensive notes a good bibliography. Collections with strong holdings in comparative literature and post colonialism will find this slender book a useful...acquisition.'-Choice Magazine, The place of the margins in literary discourse stands prominently as a fulcrum of inquiry among twentieth-century writers and contemporary literary scholars. Twentieth-century prose seeks explicitly to forge and sustain a fundamental distance from the 'center,' which appears both as anathema to contemporary writers and which does not fairly bespeak the predominant vision of l'humaine condition. Within such a frame, Dr. Muratore's masterful study of otherness brings stunning insights and new dimensions to the complex, forever unresolved problematic of alienation, marginalization and apartness. The critic illuminates the work of nine post-World War II novelists--each, by dint of circumstance or destiny, culturally apart, each singularly estranged, and, more compellingly, each the creator of a fictionalized universe in which the protagonist confronts the essence of unhinged lost-ness. Muratore thus offers sophisticated and far-reaching analyses and accompanies the reader on an intriguing series of journeys, each borne of 'difference,' yet powerfully unified. The literary dances are highly compelling as the book explores that muted but ever-present part of our human prejudice--otherness--from the perspectives of those on the fringes. Muratore explores the phenomenon with forensic expertise and vigor of thought. Clearly, every reader can relate to the face in the mirror staring back through the haze of self-recognition and the ignominy of attempting to conjure up a panacea for an intractable matter., "The place of the margins in literary discourse stands prominently as a fulcrum of inquiry among twentieth-century writers and contemporary literary scholars. Twentieth-century prose seeks explicitly to forge and sustain a fundamental distance from the 'center,' which appears both as anathema to contemporary writers and which does not fairly bespeak the predominant vision of l'humaine condition. Within such a frame, Dr. Muratore's masterful study of otherness brings stunning insights and new dimensions to the complex, forever unresolved problematic of alienation, marginalization and apartness. The critic illuminates the work of nine post-World War II novelists'e"each, by dint of circumstance or destiny, culturally apart, each singularly estranged, and, more compellingly, each the creator of a fictionalized universe in which the protagonist confronts the essence of unhinged lost-ness. Muratore thus offers sophisticated and far-reaching analyses and accompanies the reader on an intriguing series of journeys, each borne of 'difference,' yet powerfully unified. The literary dances are highly compelling as the book explores that muted but ever-present part of our human prejudice'e"otherness'e"from the perspectives of those on the fringes. Muratore explores the phenomenon with forensic expertise and vigor of thought. Clearly, every reader can relate to the face in the mirror staring back through the haze of self-recognition and the ignominy of attempting to conjure up a panacea for an intractable matter." 'e" Bethel Erastus-Obilo, Vice President of Academic Affairs and Research, University of Atlanta, USA, "The place of the margins in literary discourse stands prominently as a fulcrum of inquiry among twentieth-century writers and contemporary literary scholars. Twentieth-century prose seeks explicitly to forge and sustain a fundamental distance from the 'center,' which appears both as anathema to contemporary writers and which does not fairly bespeak the predominant vision of l'humaine condition. Within such a frame, Dr. Muratore's masterful study of otherness brings stunning insights and new dimensions to the complex, forever unresolved problematic of alienation, marginalization and apartness. The critic illuminates the work of nine post-World War II novelists--each, by dint of circumstance or destiny, culturally apart, each singularly estranged, and, more compellingly, each the creator of a fictionalized universe in which the protagonist confronts the essence of unhinged lost-ness. Muratore thus offers sophisticated and far-reaching analyses and accompanies the reader on an intriguing series of journeys, each borne of 'difference,' yet powerfully unified. The literary dances are highly compelling as the book explores that muted but ever-present part of our human prejudice--otherness--from the perspectives of those on the fringes. Muratore explores the phenomenon with forensic expertise and vigor of thought. Clearly, every reader can relate to the face in the mirror staring back through the haze of self-recognition and the ignominy of attempting to conjure up a panacea for an intractable matter." -- Bethel Erastus-Obilo, Vice President of Academic Affairs and Research, University of Atlanta, USA
Table of Content
Introduction 1. Contagions of Conformity in Camus' L'Étranger 2. The Art of Betrayal in Sábato's El túnel 3. Poeticizing Vice: Genet's Querelle de Brest 4. In the Shadows of Significance: The Dissolution of Character in Wright's The Outsider 5. The Exemplum of Empathy in André Langevin's Poussière sur la ville 6. Miscast Utopia: Reversing the Slant of History in Pineau's L'Exil selon Julia 7. Habitat for Inhumanity: The Legacy of Conquest in Naipaul's Guerillas 8. The Enemy Within: The Politics of Self-Destruction in Zongo's Le Parachutage 9. The Scattered Self: The Dislocation of identity in Wiesel's Le Cinquième Fils Afterword Appendix Bibliography
Target Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Topic
European / General, General, Social Psychology, Subjects & Themes / General
Dewey Decimal
809.3/9353
Dewey Edition
23
Genre
Psychology, Literary Criticism
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