In this re-evaluation of the writings of Joseph Conrad, Michael Greaney places language and narrative at the heart of his literary achievement. A trilingual Polish expatriate, Conrad brought a formidable linguistic self-consciousness to the English novel; tensions between speech and writing are the defining obsessions of his career. He sought very early on to develop a 'writing of the voice' based on oral or communal modes of storytelling. Greaney argues that the 'yarns' of his nautical raconteur Marlow are the most challenging expression of this voice-centred aesthetic. But Conrad's suspicion that words are fundamentally untrustworthy is present in everything he wrote. The political novels of his middle period represent a breakthrough from traditional storytelling into the writerly aesthetic of high modernism. Greaney offers an examination of a wide range of Conrad's work which combines recent critical approaches to language in post-structuralism with an impressive command of linguistic theory.



Zusammenfassung
Michael Greaney examines the place of language and narrative in the writings of Joseph Conrad.
Titel
Conrad, Language, and Narrative
EAN
9780511029196
ISBN
978-0-511-02919-6
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
15.11.2001
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
1.2 MB
Anzahl Seiten
204
Jahr
2001
Untertitel
Englisch