Goring, Paul et al.: Each Other's Yarns
Essays on Narrative and Critical Method for Jeremy Hawthorn
Edited by Paul Goring, Domhnall Mitchell and jakob Lothe
This collection of essays is a tribute to the literary critic and theorist Jeremy Hawthorn who, during a career of over forty years as an educator and writer, has made numerous major scholarly contributions which have advanced ways of thinking within literary studies.
It contains eighteen essays all addressing topics explored within Hawthorn’s work: pre-modern narrative and critical approaches, literature and politics, Modernist narratives and Joseph Conrad.
Together the essays reflect the diverse and international contours of Hawthorn’s contribution, honouring his achievements whilst also demonstrating how insights from his work continue to inspire and fuel explorations of texts and issues beyond those which he himself has addressed.
Contents
Tabula Gratulatoria 9
Acknowledgments 11
Introduction 13
Books by Jeremy Hawthorn 21
Part I: Pre-modern narrative and critical approaches
James Phelan
How Did He Do That? Understanding Henry James’ Revised Last Sentence in ‘The Aspern Papers’ 25
Paul Goring
Sourcing and Seeing the Past: Archives, Memories and Narrative Perspective in Tristram Shandy 41
Eli Løfaldli
Quixotic Book Consumption in Henry Fielding’s Joseph Andrews 57
Domhnall Mitchell
Emily Dickinson, Jerome McGann and the Historical Method 71
Juan Christian Pellicer
Impediments and Inhibitions: Thwarted Communication in Great Expectations 91
Part II: Literature and politics
Tore Rem
Englishing Ibsen: The Socialist Perspective 107
Katrine Antonsen
The Complexity of Coalition: Duality in Michael Frayn’s Democracy 123
Gail Fincham
Reflections on Jeremy Hawthorn’s ‘Dialectical Historicism’ from a Buddhist Retreat 139
John Corner
The Utility of Fiction in Politics: ‘Deception’ and Public Communication 155
Part III: Modernist narratives
Bjørn Tysdahl
Ibsen’s Presence in Joyce’s ‘Epiphanies’ 171
Paul B. Armstrong
Bloomsbury and the Crisis of Liberal Modernism: Forster, Woolf, and the Thirties 181
Daphna Erdinast-Vulcan
On ‘the Reality of Mediaeval Bodies’: Virginia Woolf and Some Questions of Historiography 197
Andrew Michael Roberts
Time, Truth and Mediation in the Modernist Novella 213
Part IV: Joseph Conrad
Yael Levin
Make Love not War: Covert Modernisms in Joseph Conrad’s The Rescue 233
Stephen Donovan
Kings of Capital: Charles Gould and John Thomas North (1842–96) 249
Josiane Paccaud-Huguet
‘C’est le chapeau qui fait l’homme’: Odd Hats in Under Western Eyes and ‘The Secret Sharer’ 261
Robert Hampson
‘Not a Bad Frenchman’: Conrad and National Identity 279
Jakob Lothe
History, Narrative, Ethics: Conrad, Titanic and Lord Jim 291
Contributors 308
Index 313
ISBN 978-82-7099-687-2, ISSN 1503-3457, 326 pp, hardcover
Format: 15x21,5 cm, weight 0,7 kg, year of publication 2012, language: English