Mondadori Store

Trova Mondadori Store

Benvenuto
Accedi o registrati

lista preferiti

Per utilizzare la funzione prodotti desiderati devi accedere o registrarti

Vai al carrello
 prodotti nel carrello

Totale  articoli

0,00 € IVA Inclusa

The (De-)Construction of Englishness and the Invention of National History in Julian Barnes' England, England (1998)

Sirinya Pakditawan
pubblicato da Examicus Verlag

Prezzo online:
13,30
13,99
-5 %
13,99

Seminar paper from the year 2004 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Literature, grade: 1, University of Hamburg, language: English, abstract: Numerous contemporary British novels display an almost obsessive concern with the notion of Englishness. Hence, they focus on the myths, traditions and attitudes that are regarded as typically English. This is a subject which is also of central interest to recent literary criticism and cultural history at large. Among the many novels that deal with a literary exploration of England's past, its cultural memory, and its national identity are such well-known works as John Fowles' Daniel Martin (1977), Jonathan Raban's travelogue Coasting (1986), Andrew Sinclair's 'Albion triptych', including his novels Gog (1967), Magog (1972) and King Ludd (1988), Adam Thorpe's Ulverton (1992), Peter Ackroyd's English Music (1992) and Antonia S. Byatt's and Graham Swift's novels. These works can be regarded as a kind of echo-chamber of England's cultural history, for they display 'deliberate Englishness'.1 With its interest in Englishness, the nature of historical truth, and the blurring of boundaries between the authentic and the imitation, Julian Barnes' novel England, England (1998), which was short-listed for the Booker prize in 1998, shares important concerns with many contemporary British novels. Like a host of other novels published after the 1960s, England, England focuses on the question of how much we can ever know about the past. Hence, this novel shows all the features characteristic of postmodernist historiographic metafiction. That is to say, like other historiographic metafictions, England, England is 'both intensely selfreflexive and yet paradoxically also lay[s] claim to historical events and personages'.2 What is more, Barnes' novel also reflects the feature which has been the major focus of attention in most of the critical work on postmodernism, i.e. a self-conscious assessment of the status and function of narrative in literature, history, and theory: 'its theoretical self-awareness of history and fiction as human constructs (historiographic metafiction) is made the grounds for its rethinking and reworking of the forms and contents of the past'.3

Dettagli down

Generi Romanzi e Letterature » Storia e Critica letteraria » Letteratura, storia e critica

Editore Examicus Verlag

Formato Ebook con Adobe DRM

Pubblicato 02/03/2012

Lingua Inglese

EAN-13 9783869438559

0 recensioni dei lettori  media voto 0  su  5

Scrivi una recensione per "The (De-)Construction of Englishness and the Invention of National History in Julian Barnes' England, England (1998)"

The (De-)Construction of Englishness and the Invention of National History in Julian Barnes
 

Accedi o Registrati  per aggiungere una recensione

usa questo box per dare una valutazione all'articolo: leggi le linee guida
torna su Torna in cima