Buscar
Characterizing Transformation Hugolian Innovations in Novelistic Practice
Cód:
491_9783639136579
Despite the memorable nature of his characters, Victor Hugos approach to characterization has long been criticized for its divergence from realist norms. Miranda Kershaws study builds upon recent Hugo scholarship on character by revealing the innovative effects produced by Hugos refusal to privilege individual identity as a structuring principle of novelistic practice. An analysis of Hugos five major novels reveals how Hugo employs character to stretch the boundaries of the novel in the directions of the theater and the prose poem while developing the genres ideological potential as a tool for the promotion of social change. Hugos novels expand the signifying functions of literary characters, allowing characters to signify collectively while anticipating the modernist tendency to reject the notion of a coherent individual subject. Kershaws study repositions Hugo as a contributor to the history of the modern French novel. It will appeal to specialists and nonspecialists wishing to deepen their understanding of the range and scope of nineteenth-century novelistic practices.
Veja mais

Quem comprou também comprou

Quem viu também comprou

Quem viu também viu