1. Introduction

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  • Опубліковано 28 сер 2024
  • Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Faulkner (AMST 246)
    Professor Dimock introduces the class to the works of Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and William Faulkner, the premiere writers of American modernism. She orients their novels along three "scales" of interpretation: global geopolitics, experimental narration, and sensory detail. Invoking the writings of critic Paul Fussell, she argues that all three writers are united by a preoccupation with World War I and the implications that the Great War has for irony in narrative representation.
    00:00 - Chapter 1. Class Logistics
    00:25 - Chapter 2. Three Analytic Scales
    02:00 - Chapter 3. Hemingway's Global Vision of American
    05:38 - Chapter 4. Faulkner's Narrative Experiments of Modernism
    10:11 - Chapter 5. Fitzgerald's Sensory Details
    12:05 - Chapter 6. Cross-Scale Analysis of World War I
    15:59 - Chapter 8. Linguistic Taboos of War
    18:36 - Chapter 7. Narrative Problems of War
    20:56 - Chapter 9. The Ironies of Storytelling after World War I: Hemingway and Fitzgerald
    33:02 - Chapter 10. The Idealism of War: Faulkner
    Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: oyc.yale.edu
    This course was recorded in Fall 2011.

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