Fiction as Knowledge

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A01=John McCormick
Author_John McCormick
Black Wood
Category=DSBH
Category=DSK
comparative literary analysis
die
Die Schlafwandler
Don Juans
Dos Passos
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Faulkner's Work
Faulkner’s Work
Hemingway's Characters
Hemingway’s Characters
historical consciousness
Hugo's Jean Valjean
Hugo’s Jean Valjean
Ideen Zur Philosophie Der Geschichte
individuality in history
Joanna Burden
Joe Christmas
Le Songe
Lena Grove
Malraux's Work
Malraux’s Work
Mme Verdurin
narrative theory
Narrative Time Past
noir
Philosophie Der Geschichte
Philosophie Der Geschichte Der
Philosophie Der Geschichte Der Menschheit
post-romantic historical imagination
Proust's Vision
Proust’s Vision
Quentin Compson
romanticism in literature
rouge
schlafwandler
Soldier's Pay
Soldier’s Pay
twentieth century novelists
Water Falling
Yoknapatawpha County
Young Man
Zur Philosophie Der Geschichte Der

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765804808
  • Weight: 360g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Oct 1998
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Critics of fiction have long been aware that the romantic movement in Europe and America gave a powerful impulse to the art of fiction. The exact nature of that impulse has resisted analysis like so much associated with romanticism. In Fiction as Knowledge John McCormick reaches for precision, proposing that much of the vitality of modern fiction derives from romantic conceptions of history which made available to fiction not merely historical subject matter, but new perceptions of reality, present and past, that pervade the work of many of the greatest writers of the post-romantic period.

Beginning with Herder and Hegel, McCormick describes those qualities in historical thought that were revolutionary in the early nineteenth century and rich in meaning for the future. Most prominent of these was the emergence of the idea of individuality, not only in society but also in history. The author demonstrates the vitality of the romantic impulse in the work of seven major novelists of the twentieth century. Marcel Proust's apprehensions of nature in his great novel are seen as Wordsworthian, while as the novel unfolds, history in the form of event and system of organization comes to dominate and to offer a paradigm of the workings of the post-romantic historical imagination. William Faulkner and Andr Malraux are shown to confront history directly, although they do not write "historical" fiction. Herman Broch, Robert Musil, and Henri de Montherlant, uncomfortable with traditional romantic attitudes, still make fullest use of Romantic historical insight to extend the range of fiction as knowledge. Ernest Hemingway, by contrast, is seen as intuitive, a pure product of his novelist's intelligence as opposed to his latter-day romantic anti-intellectualism.

Fiction as Knowledge supplies critical insight into the form of the novel as well as into the seven novelists under discussion. Not least, the book is a warning against contemporary anti-historical bias and an appeal to the cultivation of historical consciousness.

John McCormick is Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature at Rutgers University, and Honorary Fellow of English and Literature at the University of York. He is the author of George Santayana: A Biography, Catastrophe and Imagination, and The Middle Distance, by Transaction.

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