Upstarts Wanderers Or Swindlers

Upstarts  Wanderers  Or Swindlers
Author: Gustavo Pellon,Julio Rodríguez-Luis
Publsiher: Rodopi
Total Pages: 312
Release: 1986
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9062038387

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Upstarts Wanderers Or Swindlers Anatomy of the Picaro

Upstarts  Wanderers Or Swindlers  Anatomy of the Picaro
Author: Pellon
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2023-11-20
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9789004651319

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The German Picaro and Modernity

The German Picaro and Modernity
Author: Bernhard Malkmus
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 230
Release: 2011-10-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781441197238

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The German Pícaro and Modernity reads the re-emergence of the picaresque narrative in twentieth-century German-language writing as an expression of modernity and its social imaginaries. Malkmus argues that the picaresque, whose origins date back to the Spanish Renaissance and the Baroque Age, re-emerged as a reflection both of Germany's explosive modernizing processes between 1880 and 1930 and of the most barbarous implosion of modern civilization under National Socialism. Another reason for the fertility of this literary form at that particular cultural moment is rooted in the complexities of German-Jewish relations and the history of Jewish assimilation in central Europe. A considerable number of authors who used the picaresque form in the twentieth century are from a Jewish background, and Malkmus demonstrates how the picaresque narrative template also offers a medium for German-Jewish self-reflection. In highlighting these connections, he contributes not only to scholarship in European literature, but also but also to our understanding of major social, economic and political issues at stake in modernity

Noplace Like Home

Noplace Like Home
Author: Amy C. Singleton
Publsiher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1997-07-31
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781438420189

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Noplace Like Home uses four masterpieces of Russian literature--Nikolai Gogol's Dead Souls, Ivan Goncharov's Oblomov, Evgenii Zamiatin's We, and Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita--to show the successes and failings in Russia's search for home and self. Interdisciplinary in spirit, Noplace Like Home introduces Russian culture for the first time to the field of "home studies," which explores human identity in terms of man's relationship with domestic space. This broad social context, together with general cultural patterns expressed in the novels, encourages readers to consider even the most current events in Russian society--where identity and stability are again key issues--in terms of "home," "homelessness," and "noplace."

North American Encounters

North American Encounters
Author: Dieter Meindl
Publsiher: LIT Verlag Münster
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2002
Genre: History
ISBN: 3825861104

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These essays (in English except for four items in German and French) provide an intercultural perspective. They deal with such diverse aspects of North American (including Quebecois) literature. The continental context also pervades treatments of novels (featuring Indian wars, sentimentalism, the West, and modern pícaros), story cycles (e.g., Atwood's), and the long poem (Kroetsch).

Postcolonial Modernism and the Picaresque Novel

Postcolonial Modernism and the Picaresque Novel
Author: Jens Elze
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2017-09-28
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783319519388

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This book is about the contemporary picaresque novel. Despite its popularity, the picaresque, unlike the bildungsroman, is still an undertheorized genre, especially for the context of postcolonial literatures. This study considers the picaresque novel’s traditional focus on poverty and deprivation, and argues that its postcolonial versions urge us to conceive of as a more wide-ranging sense of precarity and precariousness. Non-linear biography, episodic style, protean identities, unreliable narratives, and abject landscapes are the social and formal aspects through which this precarity is thematized and performed. A concise analysis of these concepts and phenomena in the picaresque provides the structure for this book. What is especially significant in comparison to other forms of postcolonial (post)modernism is that the picaresque does not offer a general critique of a project of modernity, but through its persistent precarity points to the paradoxical logics of capitalism, which are especially nuanced under the conditions of neo-imperialism and neoliberalism. The book features texts by established postcolonial authors such as Salman Rushdie and V.S. Naipaul, but especially focuses on the more recent proliferation of the genre in works by Aravind Adiga, Mohsin Hamid and Indra Sinha.

Crisis and Continuity

Crisis and Continuity
Author: Brenda Deen Schildgen
Publsiher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 179
Release: 1998-02-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781850758518

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Here is a compact study of how Mark's Gospel meditates on time. It examines how the Gospel's contemporary setting in ordinary time defines its genre, and how Mark uses the Hebrew scriptures to remember and recall past teachings, prophecies and histories. The suspended time narratives, Mark's 'intercalations', on the other hand, interrupt the narrative of the critical time present. Finally, by bringing the eternal horizon into the events of the present, Mark's 'mythic time' reveals the crisis events as a momentary interruption of ordinary time. Similarly, during the 'ritual time', the Gospel narrative breaks with its own historical setting in order to unravel the dead-endedness of the crisis story by symbolically taking it outside time.

Echoland

Echoland
Author: Gerald Ernest Paul Gillespie,Gerald Gillespie
Publsiher: Peter Lang
Total Pages: 340
Release: 2006
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9052010307

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This book follows several major European literary «echoes» still reverberating since the mysterious emergence of such archetypal figures as Faust, Hamlet, Quixote, and Don Juan alongside lingering ancient and medieval protagonists in the Renaissance. Four centuries of attempts to redefine «modern» identity are traced against the evolution of a new genre of totalizing encyclopaedic literature, the «humoristic» tradition which re-weaves the positive and negative strands of the European, and today also New World, «grand narrative.» The book's method, inspired by Joyce, is to «listen» to recurrent motifs in the cultural flow from Humanism to Postmodernism for clues to an identity transcending the personal.