ISBN:
9780542693878
,
0542693879
Language:
English
Pages:
vi, 266 Seiten
Year of publication:
2006
Dissertation note:
Dissertation Harvard University 2006
Keywords:
Criticism
;
Comparative literature
;
Yiddish literature
;
Jewish literature
;
Jews Study and teaching
;
Comparative literature
;
Criticism
;
Jewish literature
;
Jews ; Study and teaching
;
Yiddish literature
;
Academic theses
;
Dissertations
;
Academic theses
;
Hochschulschrift
Abstract:
This dissertation introduces a new literary term, "narrative demand," defined as the internal structure of values or beliefs that makes plot possible in works of fiction, and examines its workings in a sample of texts from the modern Yiddish and Hebrew literary canons
Abstract:
In Aspects of the Novel, E.M. Forster observes that the sentence "The king died, then the queen died" does not have a plot, while the sentence "The king died, then the queen died of grief" does. Forster claims that the second sentence provides a causative connection between the events, and that this causative connection creates plot in works of fiction. This dissertation, however, claims otherwise: in Forster's example, there is no causative connection between the events, except in the beliefs of the storyteller. In order to construct the story "The king died, then the queen died of grief," one must believe that one person could mean so much to another that she could not live without him. This dissertation argues that the plots of all literary narratives are only possible because of an armature of beliefs, which is herein termed narrative demand
Abstract:
The context for this investigation is a set of works by Yiddish and Hebrew writers (1890s-1920s) who were crucial to the development of modern secular literature in these languages. This dissertation examines how these writers used plot structures to present competing values, challenging the beliefs of their readers. It progresses from works with apparently simple plots (I.L. Peretz's folk-style stories) to lyrical works whose plots appear de-emphasized (H.N. Bialik's prose poem Scroll of Fire, Moyshe Kulbak's prose poem Messiah, Son of Ephraim) to novels that appear "plotless" (J.H. Brenner's Beside the Point, Dovid Bergelson's Descent) to stories featuring excessive plots (Der Nister's symbolist stories), demonstrating how each genre exhibits narrative demand, or the rhetorical motivations which make plot possible
Abstract:
Building upon methodologies from modern narratology and earlier theories of rhetoric, this dissertation juxtaposes these previously distinct approaches in order to prove that an intrinsic connection exists between narrative and rhetoric, and that the very act of telling a story is inherently a belief-driven enterprise
Note:
Adviser: Ruth R. Wisse
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