Dialogue and Literature: Apostrophe, Auditors, and the Collapse of Romantic DiscourseExtending and reframing the works of Bakhtin, Gadamer, Ong, and Foucault--with particular emphasis on Bakhtin's late essays --Macovski constructs a theoretical model of literary dialogue and applies it to a range of Romantic texts. In reconsidering specific works within the context of cultural heuristics, rhetorical theory, and literary history, Macovski redefines Romantic discourse as both extratextual and agonistic. He thereby re-evaluates such Romantic topics as the history of the autotelic self, the proliferation of lyric orality, and the nineteenth-century critique of rhetoric. He examines poetry by Wordsworth and Coleridge, as well as such nineteenth-century prose works as Frankenstein, Wuthering Heights, and Heart of Darkness. |
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abalienate accordingly actually agonism agonistic apostrophe attempt audience auditors Bakhtin bear in mind become Catherine characterize characters Coleridge Coleridge's colloquy communication concept confession consciousness context conversation corroboration critical cultural defines desire dialectic dialogic form dialogue discourse discussion emphasis added enables evil exchange external final Frankenstein goes Heart of Darkness Heathcliff Hence hermeneutic heuristic hidden human implies instance interaction interchange interlocutors internal interpretive Kurtz language linguistic listener literary Lockwood logue lyric M. H. Abrams Magnuson Mariner's Marlow Mary Shelley monster moral moreover narrative narrator nature Nelly nineteenth-century noted notion novel ones ongoing ontological oral poem poet poetic poetry potential present question reader refers relation represent response rhetorical Rime Romantic secret lodger seeks sense Shelley's silence social speak speaker speech genres spoken stresses suggests symbols synecdoche tale thou Tintern Abbey tion understanding utterance Victor vocal vocative voice Walton words Wordsworth writes Wuthering Heights