Description

Book Synopsis
An interdisciplinary study of the Impressionist/early Modernist works of Conrad and Ford, this book aims to show how the represented temporalities (whether to do with past, present, future experience within and without the novels, or logical/structural relations of ‘before’ and ‘after’) are at the core of the won effects of both authors’ oeuvres. Looking at such well-known works as Nostromo, The Good Soldier, The Fifth Queen, Parade’s End, the study makes use of philosophy (historical and contemporary), theology, psychoanalysis, and other sources, to re-describe, unlock and display the fertile ways in which time and historical experience are both manumitted within the tales analysed, and, recursively, within their reading experience. Ultimately, the two senses of ‘making you see’, from Conrad’s iconic Preface, are used as gambits to understand the ways in which these novels are metaphysically vibrant, symbolically hopeful- as against the more common interpretation of metaphysical dissolution and (over-determined) failure.

Table of Contents
Acknowledgements Prologue: A Wilderness to Himself Introduction: Love Beyond the Ends Chapter one: Temporal Experience in Conrad’s Nostromo Chapter two: Superimposed Pasts in Ford’s Fifth Queen Chapter three: The Metaphorization of “Dowell” Chapter four: Ford’s Parade’s End: A Surgeon on Time Conclusion: The Salutary Weight of Objectivity Bibliography Index

From Sight through to In-Sight: Time, Narrative and Subjectivity in Conrad and Ford

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    A Paperback by Omar Sabbagh

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      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 01/01/2014
      ISBN13: 9789042037823, 978-9042037823
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      An interdisciplinary study of the Impressionist/early Modernist works of Conrad and Ford, this book aims to show how the represented temporalities (whether to do with past, present, future experience within and without the novels, or logical/structural relations of ‘before’ and ‘after’) are at the core of the won effects of both authors’ oeuvres. Looking at such well-known works as Nostromo, The Good Soldier, The Fifth Queen, Parade’s End, the study makes use of philosophy (historical and contemporary), theology, psychoanalysis, and other sources, to re-describe, unlock and display the fertile ways in which time and historical experience are both manumitted within the tales analysed, and, recursively, within their reading experience. Ultimately, the two senses of ‘making you see’, from Conrad’s iconic Preface, are used as gambits to understand the ways in which these novels are metaphysically vibrant, symbolically hopeful- as against the more common interpretation of metaphysical dissolution and (over-determined) failure.

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements Prologue: A Wilderness to Himself Introduction: Love Beyond the Ends Chapter one: Temporal Experience in Conrad’s Nostromo Chapter two: Superimposed Pasts in Ford’s Fifth Queen Chapter three: The Metaphorization of “Dowell” Chapter four: Ford’s Parade’s End: A Surgeon on Time Conclusion: The Salutary Weight of Objectivity Bibliography Index

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