Front Lines: The Fiction of Timothy FindleyECW Press, 1991 - 147 pages This first full-length study of Timothy Findley argues that his novels and short stories are part of a system of war texts. Not only is Findley's fiction haunted by the specter of war; it is also a compulsive testament to the infinite repetitions of war in domestic, gender, and class conflicts. Influenced by feminist literary theory, the workings of literary intertextuality, and the new historiography, the study shows how war as a literary device—as well as various historical wars, documents of war, and literary war texts—inform the novels and stories of Timothy Findley to such an extent that war becomes an integral part of their signifying systems. |
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Table des matières
CHAPTER | 30 |
CHAPTER THREE | 60 |
CHAPTER FOUR | 102 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
aesthetic aggression alliance American Civil War animal artistic battle battlefield becomes Bertha bomb Butterfly Plague Canadian child Civil Clausewitz concentration camp conflict Crazy death domestic dream Ezra Ezra Pound family members Famous Last Words fantasy fascism father female figure final Findley once Findley's novel Findley's text Findley's world finds Freyberg gender wars German Gilbert global Harper Harry historical Hitler's Hollywood Holocaust Hooker Winslow horses Hugh Selwyn Mauberley human warfare hunt ideological intertextual Isaac Rosenberg Jessie Winslow kill Lemonade literary Longboat male Mauberley's memoirs metaphor military mother motif Mottyl narrator Nazi Noah's nuclear age Paul Fussell poem political Quinn reader reading Reinhardt Renalda retreat Robert Ross Rosetta Ross's Ruth Damarosch Ruth's Sassoon scene Second World Second World War sexual Shirer Siegfried Sassoon soldiers stones story Taffler Telling of Lies Timothy Findley Timothy Findley's fiction trench Vanessa victims Voyage Wanted warrior wartime women World War II writes