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Exploring Evil

through the landscape of literature

by Gloria Cigman (Author)
©2002 Monographs 258 Pages

Summary

This book takes as its terrain the changing perceptions of evil across centuries of English Literature. Starting with the models of conflict and malevolence in the Book of Genesis, its paths are the themes of ambition, desire, survival, belief and knowledge, from the Middle Ages to the present day. As if looking through both ends of a telescope, it moves forward in time, propelled by what has been left behind and by our knowledge of what will follow. Because the cinema is so vibrant an archive of shifting images of ourselves, selected films are viewed alongside the narrative fiction, drama and poetry of each chapter. Throughout the book, résumés and quotations bring as-yet-unread writings into the same line of vision as all the others. Exploring Evil confronts the diversity of evils reflected in literary depictions of human behaviour and finds two constant elements: the abuse of free will and a denial of the humanity of others. The author argues that, however much its forms and objectives may change, the supremacy of evil in the life of the imagination remains unassailable.

Details

Pages
258
Year
2002
ISBN (Softcover)
9783906769585
Language
English
Keywords
ambition desire survival conflict malevolence
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Oxford, Wien, 2002. 258 pp., 9 ill.

Biographical notes

Gloria Cigman (Author)

The Author: Gloria Cigman studied English Literature at the Universities of London and Oxford. She taught at the University of Warwick from 1968 to 1996, when she was appointed Honorary Senior Research Fellow, and now lives and works in Oxford and Paris. Her publications, international conference papers and public lectures, extending across the centuries from the Middle Ages to our own time, have been increasingly preoccupied with evil.

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Title: Exploring Evil