Modernity after holiness: Time and its other in Herman Melville and Victor-Levy Beaulieu.
| dc.contributor.advisor | Bossiere, Camille La, | |
| dc.contributor.author | Leroux, Jean-François. | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2009-03-25T20:00:05Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2009-03-25T20:00:05Z | |
| dc.date.created | 1996 | |
| dc.date.issued | 1996 | |
| dc.degree.level | Masters | |
| dc.degree.name | M.A. | |
| dc.description.abstract | The 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.extent | 200 p. | |
| dc.identifier.citation | Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 35-05, page: 1146. | |
| dc.identifier.isbn | 9780612156401 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10393/9937 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-16576 | |
| dc.publisher | University of Ottawa (Canada) | |
| dc.subject.classification | Literature, Comparative. | |
| dc.title | Modernity after holiness: Time and its other in Herman Melville and Victor-Levy Beaulieu. | |
| dc.type | Thesis |
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