Toker, Leona . 2014.
“LOVE CONQUERS ALL: INTRODUCTION TO THE FORUM 'THE NOVEL AND THEORIES OF LOVE'”.
Partial Answers 12(2): 251-254. .
Publisher's VersionSurvey of the directions taken by the papers of the forum "The Novel and Theories of Love": explorations of love across cultural, social, ethnic, and ontological boundaries; analyses of love as a discursive phenomenon; representations of narratives of love as tests of theory.
Leona Toker, editor of Partial Answers, is Professor Emerita in the English Department of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is the author of Nabokov: The Mystery of Literary Structures (1989), Eloquent Reticence: Withholding Information in Fictional Narrative (1993), Return from the Archipelago: Narratives of Gulag Survivors (2000), and numerous articles on English, American, and Russian writers. She is the editor of Commitment in Reflection: Essays in Literature and Moral Philosophy (1994) and co-editor of Rereading Texts / Rethinking Critical Presuppositions: Essays in Honour of H.M. Daleski (1996) as well as of Knowledge and Pain (2012). Her book Gulag Literature and the Literature of Nazi Camps: An Inter-Contextual Reading is forthcoming in the fall of 2019.
leona.jpg Gray, Erik . 2014.
“Metaphors and Marriage Plots: Jane Eyre, The Egoist, and Metaphoric Dialogue in the Victorian Novel”.
Partial Answers 12(2): 267-286. .
Publisher's VersionOne of the most distinctive features of Victorian dialogue is the speakers' tendency to take up and develop one another's metaphors. This practice, which appears as frequently in actual recorded conversations as in fictional ones, is common in all sorts of situations, but it takes on a particular significance when the interlocutors are potential marriage partners. According to a widespread understanding, enshrined in the Book of Common Prayer, marriage itself is a metaphor. Literary theorists, meanwhile, particularly in the early nineteenth century, frequently describe metaphor as a type of marriage - a joining together of diverse but complementary concepts. Hence it is worth attending when an unmarried man and woman share in the creation of a single metaphor. Focusing on two representative Victorian novels, Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre and George Meredith's The Egoist, this essay suggests two major ways in which the trope is significant. First, it reflects an important shift in the conception of matrimony in England over the course of the Victorian period, from an ideal of marriage as total merging towards an increasing recognition of distinction-within-union. Second, the practice of sharing metaphor can serve in a novel, not just as a marker, but as a microcosm of conjugal compatibility; even in novels that end as soon as the lovers marry, these dialogues permit the reader to witness, in essence, a marital relationship.
June 2014: Erik Gray is Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. His criticism, including The Poetry of Indifference (2005) and Milton and the Victorians (2009), focuses on poetry, primarily of nineteenth-century England, though he is now at work on a transhistorical study of European love poetry. Most recently he helped edit Alfred Tennyson's Selected Poetry (Broadview, 2014). |
|
|
Rokotnitz, Naomi . 2014.
“Passionate Reciprocity": Love, Existentialism, and Bodily Knowledge in The French Lieutenant's Woman”.
Partial Answers 12(2): 331-354. .
Publisher's VersionJohn Fowles's novel presents romantic love as a force that strips away cant and propriety, revealing a self unmasked. If heeded, this unmasking can function as a catalyst for existential investigation, for it reveals the self to be not a stable preformed entity but, rather, a continually evolving creative project. At the same time, the novel tests the limits of conscious intervention in the governance of this project. While its narrator celebrates the advantages of having "existentialist philosophy at our disposal," analysis of the novel suggests that Fowles finds philosophy inadequately equipped to tackle either the primary impetus of love or its impact. Instead, the novel articulates an understanding that anticipates very recent findings in cognitive science and neuropsychology. Current developments in the sciences provide retroactive support for Fowles's intuitive claims and shed further light upon the novel's implications regarding choice and decision-making in love.
June 2014: In her research, Dr. Naomi Rokotnitz explores the intersections between literature, philosophy, and science, investigating the relations between knowledge acquisition, inter-personal communication, moral accountability and bodily modes of reception and perception. Author of Trusting Performance: A Cognitive Approach to Embodiment in Drama (Palgrave Macmillan 2011) and numerous articles, she teaches at Tel-Aviv University. |
|
|
naomirokotnitz.jpg