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Conrad, language, and narrative

Conrad, language, and narrative

Michael Greaney

About this book

"In this re-evaluation of the writings of Joseph Conrad, Michael Greaney places language and narrative at the heart of his literary achievement. A trilingual Polish expatriate, Conrad brought a formidable linguistic self-consciousness to the English novel; tensions between speech and writing are the defining obsessions of his career. He sought very early on to develop a 'writing of the voice' based on oral or communal modes of storytelling. Greaney argues that the 'yarns' of his nautical raconteur Marlow are the most challenging expression of this voice-centred aesthetic. But Conrad's suspicion that words are fundamentally untrustworthy is present in everything he wrote. The political novels of his middle period represent a breakthrough from traditional storytelling into the writerly aesthetic of high modernism. Greaney offers an examination of a wide range of Conrad's work which combines recent critical approaches to language in post-structuralism with an impressive command of linguistic theory."--Jacket.

Details

OL Work ID
OL6212213W

Subjects

FictionHistoryLanguageNarration (Rhetoric)TechniqueConrad, joseph, 1857-1924Fiction, techniqueLangueRomanNarrationLITERARY CRITICISMEuropeanEnglish, Irish, Scottish, WelshLanguage and languagesSpracheVertelkunstLiteraire taalCriticism and interpretation

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