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

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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.
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Format EPUB ● Seiten 198 ● ISBN 9781351569347 ● Verlag Taylor and Francis ● Erscheinungsjahr 2017 ● herunterladbar 3 mal ● Währung EUR ● ID 5326208 ● Kopierschutz Adobe DRM
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