Research Catalog
Innocence, power, and the novels of John Hawkes
- Title
- Innocence, power, and the novels of John Hawkes / Rita Ferrari.
- Author
- Ferrari, Rita.
- Publication
- Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, 1996.
Items in the Library & Off-site
Filter by
1 Item
Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Text | Request in advance | PS3552.A82 Z66 1996 | Off-site |
Holdings
Details
- Description
- vi, 220 pages; 24 cm.
- Summary
- For over forty years, John Hawkes has created fictions remarkable for their stylistic beauty and narrative experimentation. His writing has been praised for its visionary engagement with memory and anxiety, violence and eroticism, desire and imagination. Yet there have been few critical studies of the work of this major contemporary author. Rita Ferrari's Innocence, Power, and the Novels of John Hawkes is an unprecedented exploration of Hawkes's novels and novellas.
- As Ferrari discusses the subtle transformations that have occurred in each succeeding work of fiction, she traces Hawkes's experimentation with voice and perspective, his interrogation of authority and representation, and his exploration of language, gender, and identity.
- Her close readings offer fruitful and original analysis of the central and compelling paradoxes in Hawkes's fiction: how language both makes and unmakes the self, how this act of the imagination is at the same time affirming and deadly, and how, expressly, the act of authoring is both innocent and powerful.
- Ferrari subjects Hawkes's complex texts - from The Cannibal, to The Blood Oranges, to Sweet William: A Memoir of Old Horse - to an exacting and enlightened reading with eye and ear attuned to the aesthetics of his constructed images, the wholeness and homogeneity desired by his authorial figures, the critique of misogyny implied in his portrayal of women, and the increasingly self-reflexive components of his struggle to define the self.
- Rather than present a mere thematic breakdown, Ferrari offers an illuminating look at what Hawkes's novels express about the function of the artistic imagination and the practice of writing itself.
- Series Statement
- Penn studies in contemporary American fiction
- Uniform Title
- Penn studies in contemporary American fiction.
- Subjects
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references (p. 211-216) and index.
- Contents
- Ch. 1. Textual Image, Authorial Vision, Narrative Voice in The Cannibal, The Beetle Leg, The Goose on the Grave, and The Owl -- Ch. 2. Plotting Dreams: Fantasy and Representation in The Lime Twig -- Ch. 3. Writing the Self: Second Skin, the Second Sex, and the Second Take -- Ch. 4. Dreams of Wholeness, Nightmares of Dissolution: Aspects of the Artist in the Triad -- Ch. 5. The Artist in the World of Women: The Imagination and Beyond in The Passion Artist -- Ch. 6. The Labyrinth, the Wilderness, the Female Voice: Virginie: Her Two Lives and Adventures in the Alaskan Skin Trade -- Ch. 7. The Artist and His Subjects in Whistlejacket -- Conclusion: The Domain of Purity, the Fragments of Actuality - Sweet William: A Memoir of Old Horse and the Imagination's Prism.
- ISBN
- 0812233417 (alk. paper)
- LCCN
- 96021425
- OCLC
- 34675282
- ocm34675282
- Owning Institutions
- Columbia University Libraries