Current Search: Mason, Eric Daniel. (x)
-
-
Title
-
Narrating the chronotope of the saint: Ordinary time in the novel.
-
Creator
-
Mason, Eric Daniel., Florida Atlantic University, Faraci, Mary
-
Abstract/Description
-
All narratives in which the human image is presented establish an interconnectedness of time and space, what Mikhail Bakhtin calls the chronotope. When Victor Hugo wrote Les Miserables, he drew upon a historical chronotope originating in the narratives that accompanied the spread of Christianity, and which found its purest distillate in the genre of hagiography---the narrating of the lives of saints. When the mode of sacred time established in the conventionally brief hagiologic narrative,...
Show moreAll narratives in which the human image is presented establish an interconnectedness of time and space, what Mikhail Bakhtin calls the chronotope. When Victor Hugo wrote Les Miserables, he drew upon a historical chronotope originating in the narratives that accompanied the spread of Christianity, and which found its purest distillate in the genre of hagiography---the narrating of the lives of saints. When the mode of sacred time established in the conventionally brief hagiologic narrative, which depended on a linear progression having unity with God as its end, is integrated into the extended form of the novel, it finds itself at odds with the ubiquitous adventure time---the random disjunctions of time and space without which there is no plot. The delineated spaces of roads and gardens in Les Miserables serve to concretize the mediation between these two modes of time, resulting in the ordinary time of the novel.
Show less
-
Date Issued
-
2001
-
PURL
-
http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/12796
-
Subject Headings
-
Hagiography, Time in literature, Narration (Rhetoric), Hugo, Victor,--1802-1885--Misérables
-
Format
-
Document (PDF)