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To Realize the Universal

Allegorical Narrative in Thornton Wilder’s Plays and Novels

by Hansong Dan (Author)
©2012 Thesis 251 Pages

Summary

By mapping the contour of Thornton Wilder’s major plays and novels, this book offers a fresh reading of his deceptively unfashionable art of allegorical narrative, and aims to reaffirm Malcolm Cowley’s perspicacious judgment: «(Wilder is) one of the toughest and most complicated minds in contemporary America.» After a review of the history and scholarship of allegory, the author chronologically traces Wilder’s extensive, complex and resilient engagement with allegory, a genre employed not only for literary manifestation but for philosophical inquiry. Moving expertly from Wilder’s early religious playlets through his Pulitzerwinning fictions and plays to his largely obscure late writings, this study reveals that allegory and Wilder studies are two mutually illuminating topics. What distinguishes Wilder from other modern allegorists is not only his self-reflexive shuttling between the novel and the drama, but his tenacious persistence on pressing for the sublime universality of our mundane experiences in a postsacral world. Overturning the common characterization of Wilder as a preachy voice of Puritan religiosity, this book argues for the centrality of ambiguity that produces nuanced meanings in Wilder’s allegorical narratives.

Details

Pages
251
Year
2012
ISBN (PDF)
9783035103656
ISBN (Softcover)
9783034310819
DOI
10.3726/978-3-0351-0365-6
Language
English
Publication date
2012 (March)
Keywords
history universality ambiguity
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2012. 251 pp.

Biographical notes

Hansong Dan (Author)

Hansong Dan is Associate Professor of English at Nanjing University. He received his PhD from Nanjing University in English and American Literature in 2009. His fields of research include 20th century American Literature and post-9/11 Fiction Studies. He is also a translator of Thomas Pynchon and Thornton Wilder.

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Title: To Realize the Universal