Achieving ‘At-one-ment’ Achieving ‘At-one-ment’

Achieving ‘At-one-ment‪’‬

Storytelling and the Concept of the Self In Ian McEwan’s the Child In Time, Black Dogs, Enduring Love, and Atonement

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Descripción editorial

Ian McEwan's novels are characterised by innovative forms of plot-oriented storytelling that combine a pronounced interest in contemporary (British) culture and (recent) history with a concern for social and ethical questions. Novels like ‘The Child in Time, Black Dogs, Enduring Love’, and ‘Atonement’ draw the reader's attention to the difficulty, complexity, and relativity of value commitments in a world where prescriptive master narratives and old essentialisms have been debunked. This book undertakes to incorporate the discussion of storytelling and the concept of the ‘self’ into the discourse of values revived by ethical critics at the turn of the millennium. Bringing together findings from philosophy, psychology, literary and cultural studies, the study introduces a concept of the ‘self’ that acknowledges our ineradicable need for structures of meaning and orientation while taking into account the plurality and heterogeneity of postmodern ways of life.

GÉNERO
Referencia
PUBLICADO
2004
14 de septiembre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
106
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Peter Lang GmbH
VENDEDOR
Peter Lang AG
TAMAÑO
563.3
KB