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  1. Narrative and freedom
    the shadows of time
    Published: 1994; ©1994
    Publisher:  Yale University Press, New Haven

    Drawing on works by the Russian writers Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and Chekhov, by other writers as diverse as Sophocles, Cervantes, and George Eliot, by thinkers as varied as William James, Mikhail Bakhtin, and Stephen Jay Gould, and from philosophy, the... more

    Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Sachsen-Anhalt / Zentrale
    No inter-library loan

     

    Drawing on works by the Russian writers Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and Chekhov, by other writers as diverse as Sophocles, Cervantes, and George Eliot, by thinkers as varied as William James, Mikhail Bakhtin, and Stephen Jay Gould, and from philosophy, the Bible, television, and much more, Gary Saul Morson examines the relation of time to narrative form and to an ethical dimension of the literary experience Morson asserts that the way we think about the world and narrate events is often in contradiction to the truly eventful and open nature of daily life. Literature, history, and the sciences frequently present experience as if contingency, chance, and the possibility of diverse futures were all illusory. As a result, people draw conclusions or accept ideologies without sufficiently examining their consequences or alternatives. However, says Morson, there is another way to read and construct texts. He explains that most narratives are developed through foreshadowing and "backshadowing" (foreshadowing ascribed after the fact), which tend to reduce the multiplicity of possibilities in each moment. But other literary works try to convey temporal openness through a device he calls "sideshadowing." Sideshadowing suggests that to understand an event is to grasp what else might have happened pt. I. The Shape of Narrative and the Shape of Experience. Ch. 1. Prelude: Process and Product. Ch. 2. Foreshadowing. Ch. 3. Interlude: Bakhtin's Indeterminism -- pt. II. Sideshadowing and Its Possibilities. Ch. 4. Sideshadowing. Ch. 5. Paralude: Presentness and Its Diseases. Ch. 6. Backshadowing. Ch. 7. Opinion and the World of Possibilities

     

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