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Search Results for Marcel Proust

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Journal Article
Poetics Today (2007) 28 (4): 573–606.
Published: 01 December 2007
..., and narrator, may be applied to Proust's novel. Marcel, the protagonist, crowns his literary vocation only at the end of a protracted love quest. His success in the love quest coincides with the end of the novel, and it is at this point that the distinction between fictional character and historical author...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2016) 37 (1): 55–105.
Published: 01 March 2016
...Darci L. Gardner One of the enigmas of Marcel Proust's great novel is the unusual type of engagement it necessitates. It is impossible to read without frequently referring back to earlier portions of the text. Hypotactic sentences and unanticipated developments not only trigger reflection...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2017) 38 (4): 635–666.
Published: 01 December 2017
.... The experience of involuntary memory, in other words, constitutes a type of anachronism: the intrusion of a past sensation within the present. Marcel Proust’s idea of anachronism should be understood in relation to the intellectual world of the turn of the twentieth century, in particular that historical science...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2004) 25 (1): 91–135.
Published: 01 March 2004
...Joshua Landy Although it is, in principle, almost universally accepted today that authors and narrators must be rigorously demarcated, somehow scholars of Marcel Proust seem—whether wittingly or unwittingly—to make an exception for In Search of Lost me . Because it is written in the first person...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2007) 28 (4): 619–652.
Published: 01 December 2007
...Hervé G. Picherit Much in Marcel Proust's Un amour de Swann —notably its position in the Recherche and the title itself—suggests that we might derive from the tale of Swann's love for Odette a general “law” about love, applicable throughout the Recherche . Yet far from conveying a clear account...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2007) 28 (4): 607–618.
Published: 01 December 2007
... is not an allegorized rendition of his creator's journey to authorship. Dante the pilgrim may well become Dante the writer, but Marcel does not become Proust, nor does he go on to write the Recherche ; quite the contrary, the tantalizing and deliberately tempting set of similarities between author and narrator...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2000) 21 (3): 479–502.
Published: 01 September 2000
... Screen: Reading Proust Visually (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press). 1999 “All in the Family: Familiarity and Estrangement According to Marcel Proust,” in The Familial Gaze , ed. Marianne Hirsch, 223 -47(Dartmouth, NH: University Press of New England). Bertho, Sophie 1990 “Asservir...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2005) 26 (3): 551–554.
Published: 01 September 2005
... a ‘‘rehabilitation’’ (4) of Marcel Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu, on two interconnected levels. On the one hand, Landy defends the originality and the coherence of Proust’s philosophy. On the other hand, he explains why this philosophy could only be expressed in a work of fiction. Writing a novel allows...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2005) 26 (3): 554–556.
Published: 01 September 2005
... a ‘‘rehabilitation’’ (4) of Marcel Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu, on two interconnected levels. On the one hand, Landy defends the originality and the coherence of Proust’s philosophy. On the other hand, he explains why this philosophy could only be expressed in a work of fiction. Writing a novel allows...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2005) 26 (3): 557–558.
Published: 01 September 2005
... a ‘‘rehabilitation’’ (4) of Marcel Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu, on two interconnected levels. On the one hand, Landy defends the originality and the coherence of Proust’s philosophy. On the other hand, he explains why this philosophy could only be expressed in a work of fiction. Writing a novel allows...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2005) 26 (3): 558–561.
Published: 01 September 2005
... a ‘‘rehabilitation’’ (4) of Marcel Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu, on two interconnected levels. On the one hand, Landy defends the originality and the coherence of Proust’s philosophy. On the other hand, he explains why this philosophy could only be expressed in a work of fiction. Writing a novel allows...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2005) 26 (3): 561–562.
Published: 01 September 2005
... a ‘‘rehabilitation’’ (4) of Marcel Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu, on two interconnected levels. On the one hand, Landy defends the originality and the coherence of Proust’s philosophy. On the other hand, he explains why this philosophy could only be expressed in a work of fiction. Writing a novel allows...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2005) 26 (3): 549–551.
Published: 01 September 2005
... pp. In this remarkable book, Joshua Landy proposes a ‘‘rehabilitation’’ (4) of Marcel Proust’s A la recherche du temps perdu, on two interconnected levels. On the one hand, Landy defends the originality and the coherence of Proust’s philosophy. On the other hand, he explains why this philosophy...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2022) 43 (4): 595–610.
Published: 01 December 2022
... Channa and Dubinsky Claude . Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press . Harding Jennifer Riddle . 2017 . Similes, Puns, and Counterfactuals in Literary Narrative . New York : Routledge . Hopkins Gerard . 1948 . Marcel Proust: A Selection from His Miscellaneous Writings...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2000) 21 (2): 465–467.
Published: 01 June 2000
... to various literary works and writers’ observations: Marcel Proust, Julien Gracq, Victor Segalen, and so on. This is the path followed in chapter . Having cited comments on the style of the surrealist poet Max Jacob or of Gustave...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2023) 44 (1-2): 295–297.
Published: 01 June 2023
... of Samuel Beckett, Marcel Proust, Alice Munro, and Margaret Atwood, among others. She edited the Boydell collection Literature and Ageing with Margery Vibe Skagen in 2020 and is writing a monograph on aging and the experience of time in modern literature and thought, to appear in 2024. Alice Crossley...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2001) 22 (3): 706–708.
Published: 01 September 2001
... Sade, Laurence Sterne, Denis Diderot, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau to Marcel Proust, James Joyce, Gertrude Stein, Victor Shklovskii (in Sentimental Journey), Henry Bataille, Samuel Beckett, and Henry Miller, amply attests. ‘‘Narrative fiction Suke- nick writes, ‘‘makes contingent statements about...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2024) 45 (2): 267–274.
Published: 01 June 2024
... and assessed failures and triumphs, all in an attempt to peer into the model and unlock its secrets. Even as we were working on this, it was clear there was some peril in speaking freely about our assessments. Having spent years writing about complex writers like Marcel Proust and Franz Kafka...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2015) 36 (1-2): 127–129.
Published: 01 June 2015
... in the writings of the lesbian writer Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette. Particularly her novel The Pure and the Impure (1932) holds a dialogue with the representation of homosexuality in Marcel Proust’s In Search of Lost Time. Chapter 9, “Ce´line and Montmartre” by Nich- olas Hewitt, focuses on the titular quarter...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2015) 36 (1-2): 130–133.
Published: 01 June 2015
... in the writings of the lesbian writer Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette. Particularly her novel The Pure and the Impure (1932) holds a dialogue with the representation of homosexuality in Marcel Proust’s In Search of Lost Time. Chapter 9, “Ce´line and Montmartre” by Nich- olas Hewitt, focuses on the titular quarter...