Description

Book Synopsis
Claude Simon: Fashioning the Past by Writing the Present considers the aesthetic, cultural, and philosophical facets of a temporal paradox in the works of French novelist Claude Simon (1913-2005), and its broader implications for the study of narrative, and for cultural and post-modern theory. This paradox emerges from the problematic representation of the past through an aesthetic rooted in an exclusive valorization of the present. In his 1985 Nobel speech, as well as on other numerous occasions, Simon expressed a fascination with simultaneity through the provocative claim that he never wrote about the past, but attempted to capture only what was happening during the writing process, that is, in the “present of writing,” as he put it. Simon’s seemingly unambiguous claim raises significant issues and contradictions that become extensively apparent when the statement is considered in the light of his fictional works, since these must be construed, for the most part, as explorations of the past. In this study Alina Cherry propose to look at the tensions that arise from this paradox, and examine the present of writing holistically—that is both as a stylistic device and within the thematic context of Simon’s works—in order to assess its capacity for becoming an instrument of ontological and epistemological inquiry that can also intervene powerfully in the decisive philosophical and socio-political debates that have animated the cultural landscape of post-World War II France. Simon’s vivid portrayals of suffering and devastation open new ways of understanding the impact of some of the most traumatic historical events of the twentieth century: the two World Wars and the Spanish Civil War. This impact is necessarily connected with a need to tell these events, and to tell them in highly innovative ways, namely by creating a distinctive style that revolutionizes the outworn narrative traditions of a world whose very foundations have been shattered by the chaos of war and effectively undermines various institutions and dominant socio-cultural structures, revealing implicitly and explicitly, a strong ethical vein.

Trade Review
Enhanced with the inclusion of a list of abbreviations, an eight page bibliography, and a six page index, Claude Simon: Fashioning the Past by Writing the Present is an erudite and impressive work of explanatory scholarship. Of special note is Professor Cherry's epilogue: 'Writing (in) the Present, or the Art of Nonhierarchial Thinking'. While unreservedly recommended for college and university library Philosophy collections in general, and French Literature supplemental studies lists in particular, it should be noted for students and non-specialist general readers with an interest in the subject. * Midwest Book Review *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction Chapter 1: Dimensions of the Present Chapter 2: The Rhetoric of Immediacy Chapter 3: Of Traces and Relics, or How the Past Keeps Coming Back Chapter 4: Recording the Unintelligible Fury of History Epilogue Bibliography Index About the Author

Claude Simon: Fashioning the Past by Writing the

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    A Hardback by Alina Cherry

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      Publisher: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
      Publication Date: 16/08/2016
      ISBN13: 9781611478969, 978-1611478969
      ISBN10: 1611478960

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Claude Simon: Fashioning the Past by Writing the Present considers the aesthetic, cultural, and philosophical facets of a temporal paradox in the works of French novelist Claude Simon (1913-2005), and its broader implications for the study of narrative, and for cultural and post-modern theory. This paradox emerges from the problematic representation of the past through an aesthetic rooted in an exclusive valorization of the present. In his 1985 Nobel speech, as well as on other numerous occasions, Simon expressed a fascination with simultaneity through the provocative claim that he never wrote about the past, but attempted to capture only what was happening during the writing process, that is, in the “present of writing,” as he put it. Simon’s seemingly unambiguous claim raises significant issues and contradictions that become extensively apparent when the statement is considered in the light of his fictional works, since these must be construed, for the most part, as explorations of the past. In this study Alina Cherry propose to look at the tensions that arise from this paradox, and examine the present of writing holistically—that is both as a stylistic device and within the thematic context of Simon’s works—in order to assess its capacity for becoming an instrument of ontological and epistemological inquiry that can also intervene powerfully in the decisive philosophical and socio-political debates that have animated the cultural landscape of post-World War II France. Simon’s vivid portrayals of suffering and devastation open new ways of understanding the impact of some of the most traumatic historical events of the twentieth century: the two World Wars and the Spanish Civil War. This impact is necessarily connected with a need to tell these events, and to tell them in highly innovative ways, namely by creating a distinctive style that revolutionizes the outworn narrative traditions of a world whose very foundations have been shattered by the chaos of war and effectively undermines various institutions and dominant socio-cultural structures, revealing implicitly and explicitly, a strong ethical vein.

      Trade Review
      Enhanced with the inclusion of a list of abbreviations, an eight page bibliography, and a six page index, Claude Simon: Fashioning the Past by Writing the Present is an erudite and impressive work of explanatory scholarship. Of special note is Professor Cherry's epilogue: 'Writing (in) the Present, or the Art of Nonhierarchial Thinking'. While unreservedly recommended for college and university library Philosophy collections in general, and French Literature supplemental studies lists in particular, it should be noted for students and non-specialist general readers with an interest in the subject. * Midwest Book Review *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction Chapter 1: Dimensions of the Present Chapter 2: The Rhetoric of Immediacy Chapter 3: Of Traces and Relics, or How the Past Keeps Coming Back Chapter 4: Recording the Unintelligible Fury of History Epilogue Bibliography Index About the Author

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