Identity, Narrative and PoliticsRoutledge, 4 apr 2014 - 192 pagina's Identity, Narrative and Politics argues that political theory has barely begun to develop a notion of narrative identity; instead the book explores the sophisticated ideas which emerge from novels as alternative expressions of political understanding. This title uses a broad international selection of Twentieth Century English language works, by writers such as Nadine Gordimer and Thomas Pynchon. |
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... Connolly, respectively and a fourth, 'the classical ideal of civil association' which he considers 'best suited to modern conditions of increasing diversity' (O'Sullivan 1997: 740). Each of these indicates a relevant form of political ...
... Connolly, for example, the construction of identity demands awareness of the political as the arena within which a struggle with the problem of evil takes place (O'Sullivan 1997: 747). Civil association theory allows for diversity ...
... (Connolly 1991; cf. Taylor 1989: 18). Novels allow this, presenting 'the awkward couplings of experience non- analytically, holistically, and ... in all their cultural and historical particularity' (Cave 1995: 118-19). Some forms of ...
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Inhoudsopgave
The narrative construction of identity | 22 |
Uncertain identity | 43 |
Gaps and fragments | 64 |
Contingency identity and agency | 87 |
Coherent identity | 107 |
Narrative identity and politics | 127 |
Postscript | 150 |