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The Serpent’s Part

Narrating the Self in Canadian Literature

by David Lucking (Author)
©2003 Monographs 214 Pages

Summary

Canada is a country in which the issue of identity has always been a prominent concern, and one that has frequently been explored in the literature of that nation. The theme of identity often merges into that of language, the forging of names and the elaboration of narratives being perceived as means through which identity is constructed in both the private and the public spheres. This study examines the relation between identity and language as this is evidenced in a number of works of Canadian literature, ranging from Susanna Moodie’s Roughing It in the Bush to Timothy Findley’s Famous Last Words. Particular attention is dedicated to the telling of stories in these books, both as an existential strategy on the part of particular authors or the characters they create, and as an explicitly thematized concern. It is argued that while the works under discussion dramatize the paradoxes and the perils inherent in the endeavour to construct the self by narrative means, they also insist on the primacy of narrative in imparting a coherent pattern to experience, and on the centrality of the role it plays in humanity’s quest for meaning.

Details

Pages
214
Year
2003
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039100392
Language
English
Keywords
Literatur History and Identity in Canadian Literature the comedy company of the psyche Englisch Identität (Motiv) Erzähltechnik Kanada Geschichte 1850-1980 Divided Voice rites and wrongs of passage the novelist as navigator "Moodie's ""R
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Oxford, Wien, 2003. 214 pp.

Biographical notes

David Lucking (Author)

The Author: David Lucking is Professor of English at the University of Lecce, where he teaches both English and Canadian literature. His full-length publications include Ancestors and Gods: Margaret Laurence and the Dialectics of Identity, Plays upon the Word: Shakespeare’s Drama of Language, Beyond Innocence: Literary Transformations of the Fall, and Conrad’s Mysteries: Variations on an Archetypal Theme.

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Title: The Serpent’s Part