Partial Answers - Homepage Journal of Literature and The History of Ideas The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
 Publications

 Volume 8/2: British Women Writers
(forthcoming)

 June 2010

 Volume 8/1
 January 2010

 Volume 7/2: Eyewitness Narratives
 June 2009

 Volume 7/1
 January 2009

 Volume 6/2: Narrative Knowing, Living, Telling
 June 2008

 Volume 6/1
 January 2008

 Volume 5/2
 June 2007

 Volume 5/1
 January 2007

 Volume 4/2: Narrative as a Way of Thinking
 June 2006

 Volume 4/1
 January 2006

 Volume 3/2
 June 2005

 Volume 3/1
 January 2005

 Volume 2/2
 June 2004

 Volume 2/1
 January 2004

 Volume 1/2
 June 2003

 Volume 1/1
 January 2003

 Quick Article Search

   Newest Articles

 Everyday Apocalypse
 Elana Gomel

 Paranoid Imaginings
 Irene Tucker

 Borderline Subjectivity
 Daphna Erdinast-Vulcan

 The Ethical Tempo of Narrative Syntax
 Garrett Stewart

 Generationalizing
 Frances Ferguson

 The Ethics of Temporality
 Amit Yahav

 Conrad’s “Woman as Truth” Topos
 William Freedman

 The Not-So-Modern Proto-Modern:
 Robert Arbour

Get Adobe Reader

Updated Up To 05/01/2010
Volume 4, Number 2 (June 2006) : 115-29
Judgment, Progression, and Ethics in Portrait Narratives
The Case of Alice Munro’s “Prue”
James Phelan
Rubric A: Narrative as a Way of Thinking

Abstract

Alice Munro’s “Prue” (1984) is a formally innovative short story that eschews epiphany or any other sign of change or movement on the part of its protagonist and that nevertheless offers its audience a highly moving experience. I attempt to account for the story’s effective unconventionality by examining the interrelations between its form and its ethical dimension. I locate those interrelations in the interactions of narrative judgment and narrative progression. More specifically, I identify three main kinds of narrative judgment — interpretive, ethical, and aesthetic, and their connections to three main kinds of progression — those we associate with narrativity, lyricality, and what I call portraiture.  Portraiture is a mode, familiar in the dramatic monologues of Browning, in which the main goal is the representation of character. By examining the interaction of judgment and progression in “Prue,” I argue that it is both a highly successful hybrid form, one that synthesizes narrativity and portraiture, and that this understanding leads us to its ethical dimension. I close with some observations about larger implications of the analysis for our understanding of both other hybrid forms and the utility of this rhetorical approach to form and ethics.


 All Rights Reserved to The Hebrew University of Jerusalem- Partial Answers © 2004. Powered By Priza

The Johns Hopkins University Press