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Literary Marriages

A Study of Intertextuality in a Series of Short Stories by Joyce Carol Oates

by Monica Loeb (Author)
©2002 Monographs 200 Pages

Summary

A series of intertextual short stories by Joyce Carol Oates, published in 1972, constitutes the subject-matter of the present work. Having entered into ‘literary marriages’ with beloved masters, such as Kafka, Joyce, Thoreau, Flaubert, James and Chekhov, Oates has ‘re-imagined’ their classic masterpieces.
This study aims at finding out whether Oates remains ‘faithful’ to the original versions. What elements besides the titles are retained, or added? Why does a young American woman writer undertake a dialogue with deceased authors and their texts? Why the short story genre? What is Oates’s relationship to intertextuality, literary tradition, or the very aesthetics of her own art?
Grounded in theories of intertextuality, comparative analyses show that Oates remains ‘faithful’ in some of her spiritual unions, while committing ‘infidelities’ in others. For a woman writer in the 1970s transgression was a necessity for survival; these stories thus belong to the revisionary movement. While assimilating and engendering a strongly Eurocentred male literary tradition, Oates manages to unlock energy from the original stories transforming them into expressions of her very own distinct literary voice.

Details

Pages
200
Year
2002
ISBN (Softcover)
9783906768090
Language
English
Keywords
Classic masterpiece Comparative analysis Tansgression Survival
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Oxford, Wien, 2002. 200 pp.

Biographical notes

Monica Loeb (Author)

The Author: Educated at Barnard College, Columbia University, Monica Loeb received a Ph.D. from Umeå University. She is currently Assistant Professor of English at Västerås University College in Sweden and is specializing in contemporary North American literature.

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Title: Literary Marriages