In Form, Digressions on the Act of FictionSouthern Illinois University Press, 1985 - 247 psl. Formmust never be taken for granted, but must be created as the work itself is shaped: "The writer works not from a priori ideas about what will happen and what form it will take, but in and through the text." Sukenick, one of our most original contemporary novelists, describes these essays as "the comments of a fiction writer about writing, not those of a critic on what has been written. They are more or less reports on experience--those of one engaged in the ongoing struggle with the angel of form, rather than of one studying its consequences from a cool distance: 'in form, ' not 'on form.'" The difficulty of creative works no longer accessible to traditional reading habits has threatened us with an age of criticism in which interpretation has become more imposing than invention. One of the tasks of modern fiction, therefore, is "to displace, energize, and re-embody its criticism--literally to reunite at with our experience of the text." |
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... literature is not the sanction for literature . Personally , I'm quite certain there is an argument to be made in justification of literature on a purely formal basis , but it probably would have more to do with neurology than literary ...
... Literature of Exhaustion , " which in effect recommends that literature turn from imitation of re- ality to imitation of literature . This attempt to turn defeat into victory is based on an initial misapprehension of defeat . Fiction ...
... literature . And I think that , despite all his talent and intellectual gifts , this was the wrong move for him ; his works have gotten predictably claustrophobic . Barth's tack was to say that there is always the intervention of ...
Turinys
Twelve Digressions Toward a Study of Composition | 3 |
Thirteen Digressions | 16 |
Ten Digressions | 34 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 8