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Modernity after holiness: Time and its other in Herman Melville and Victor-Levy Beaulieu.

dc.contributor.advisorBossiere, Camille La,
dc.contributor.authorLeroux, Jean-François.
dc.date.accessioned2009-03-25T20:00:05Z
dc.date.available2009-03-25T20:00:05Z
dc.date.created1996
dc.date.issued1996
dc.degree.levelMasters
dc.degree.nameM.A.
dc.description.abstractThe first part of the present work elaborates the "problem" that concerns the study as a whole, namely the crisis in historical consciousness that figures prominently in the fiction of Herman Melville and Victor-Levy Beaulieu. This crisis has as its zero degree the humiliation of historical paradigms and the failure of traditional theodicy that Pierre, or The Ambiguities and Sagamo Job J narrativize. The apprehension of a nonsensical totality of being results in the "horror of history" (Eliade), which dread precipitates various modes of forgetfulness and uchronia. A stalemate emerges from the readings in Chapter One: on the one hand, a solipsistic textual infinite is opened by the death of the fiction of the end; on the other hand, the will to sainthood and eternity portends a form of Western nihilism. It is this "dead wall" of metaphysics that inspires the effort to think more and differently in the chapters that follow. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
dc.format.extent200 p.
dc.identifier.citationSource: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 35-05, page: 1146.
dc.identifier.isbn9780612156401
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10393/9937
dc.identifier.urihttp://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-16576
dc.publisherUniversity of Ottawa (Canada)
dc.subject.classificationLiterature, Comparative.
dc.titleModernity after holiness: Time and its other in Herman Melville and Victor-Levy Beaulieu.
dc.typeThesis

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