Ekphrastic Conceptualism in Postmodern British and American Novels
Don DeLillo, Paul Auster and Tom McCarthy
-
- 57,99 €
-
- 57,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
The relationship between the arts has fascinated people for centuries. Discussing the ancient notion of ekphrasis, this study examines the interpenetration of literary and non-literary art. Traditionally, ekphrasis is defined as a rhetorical device for the poetic description of a painting or a sculpture that has been steadily gaining attention in literary studies since the mid-twentieth century. Taking a close look at the works of Don DeLillo, Paul Auster and Tom McCarthy, the author demonstrates how ekphrasis is useful for reading contemporary novels that feature non-representative, conceptual works of art.
Well Said Well Seen: The Pictorial Paradigm in John Banville's Fiction.
2006
Pain, Trauma and The Need to Visualize
2010
Reading the Absurd
2013
The Edinburgh Companion to the Prose Poem
2021
Neorealism in Serbian Prose of the 1990S: Its Development and Transformations (Essay)
2006
Peter Ackroyd and Metafiction. A Brief Introduction
2015
Concepts as Correlates of Lexical Labels
2015
World War I from Local Perspectives: History, Literature and Visual Arts
2015
Alice Munro: Reminiscence, Interpretation, Adaptation and Comparison
2015
Language Origins
2018
Literary and cultural forays into the contemporary
2016
A Dark Transfusion: The Polish Literary Response to Early English Gothic
2018