The narrative shape of truth : veridiction in modern European literature.

Its champions-and its detractors-have often understood the novel as the genre par excellence of truthlessness. The Narrative Shape of Truth counters this widely accepted view. It argues instead that the novel has found new, historically specific configurations of truth and narrative. The nineteenth-...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kliger, Ilya (Author)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: [Place of publication not identified] Pennsylvania State University Press 2011.
Series:Literature and philosophy.
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Online Access:Click for online access
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Summary:Its champions-and its detractors-have often understood the novel as the genre par excellence of truthlessness. The Narrative Shape of Truth counters this widely accepted view. It argues instead that the novel has found new, historically specific configurations of truth and narrative. The nineteenth-century novel, in particular, can be understood as responding to the emerging tendency to view truth as inseparable from, rather than opposed to, time. Ilya Kliger offers a nonreductive way of reading the histories of philosophy and the novel side by side. He identifies the crucial moment in the epistemological history of narrative when, at the end of the eighteenth century, a new structural affiliation between truth and time emerged. This book examines novels by four authors-Balzac, Stendhal, Dostoevsky, and Tolstoy-as well as the writings of leading European intellectuals and philosophers. Kliger argues that the "realist" novel can be conceived as prompting us (and giving us the means) to think of truth differently, as immanent in a temporal shape rather than transcendent in a principle, a fact, or a higher order
Physical Description:1 online resource
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages [233]-241) and index.
ISBN:0271037989
9780271037981
9780271078168
0271078162
Language:English.