Beschreibung
Inspired by Martin Heidegger’s notion of being-in-the-world, this study presents a quasi-phenomenological close reading of Herman Melville’s most famous novella
and Mark Twain’s most famous novel
It is meant as a broad critique of both cultural and intellectual rhetoric of recalcitrance, estrangement and awayness that has long predominated within interpretations of American literature. The study refers selectively to the works of such classic authors as James F. Cooper, Washington Irving, R. W. Emerson, H. D. Thoreau, Walt Whitman, Henry James, Robert Frost, James Joyce, and Donald Barthelme. As an extended intertextual footnote,
advances also a more positive existential appreciation of the ostensibly forbidding landscape of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s most famous romance
.
Autorenportrait
Janusz Semrau teaches American literature at Adam Mickiewicz University in Pozna? and at the Academy of Management in Warsaw. He is the author of various publications.
Inhalt
Contents: America and Americanness – Classic American fiction – Bartleby the Scrivener – Huck Finn – Hester Prynne – Intertextuality – Existential phenomenology – Martin Heidegger – Being-in-the-world. Inhaltsverzeichnis