Modernism and the Rhythms of Sympathy : Vernon Lee, Virginia Woolf, D.H. Lawrence
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
Oxford English Monographs
ISBN-10
0199674086
ISBN-13
9780199674084
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Imprint
Oxford University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Mar 28th, 2013
Print length
228 Pages
Weight
412 grams
Dimensions
22.40 x 13.90 x 1.80 cms
Ksh 27,600.00
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This book is about ideas of sympathy in the early twentieth-century novel. It offers a new reading of literary modernism, challenging notions of modernism as hostile to emotion and empathy. It also offers a new intervention into the growing field of literature and emotion studies.
How do we feel for others? Must we try to understand other minds? Do we have to respect others'' autonomy, or even their individuality? Or might sympathy be fundamentally more intuitive, bodily and troubling? Taking as her focus the work of Virginia Woolf, D.H. Lawrence, and Vernon Lee (the first novelist to use the word ''empathy''), Kirsty Martin explores how modernist writers thought about questions of sympathetic response. Attending closely to literary depictions of gesture, movement and rhythm; and to literary explorations of the bodily and of transcendence; this book argues that central to modernism was an ideal of sympathy that was morally complex, but that was driven by a determination to be true to what it is to feel.Offering new readings of major literary texts, and original research into their historical contexts, Modernism and the Rhythms of Sympathy sets modernist texts alongside recent discussions of emotion and cognition. It offers a fresh reading of literary modernism, and suggests how modernism might continue to unsettle our thinking about feeling today.
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