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The unethical storyteller: Wyndham Lewis and humanity unredeemed

  • Autores: María Jesús Hernáez Lerena
  • Localización: Proceedings of the 30th International AEDEAN Conference: [electronic resource] / María Losada Friend (ed. lit.), Pilar Ron Vaz (ed. lit.), Sonia Hernández Santano (ed. lit.), Jorge Casanova García (ed. lit.), 2007, ISBN 978-84-96826-31-1
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Wyndham Lewis, the enfant terrible of British modernism, is mostly regarded as a thinker and essayist, as a writer of explosive position pieces, rather than as a storyteller. His characters, grotesque and mechanical, are deprived of all humanity, which many believe it is a strategic disaster for fiction. However, his very first attempt at fiction, a collection of short stories included in the book "The Wild Body" (1927), reveal a conscious attempt to turn into stories certain semi-autobiographical pieces initially published in the form of the descriptive sketch. My paper will deal with Lewis's commitment to Story, regarded as a non-threatening medium which communicates knowledge, and to short story as a modern narrative practice with a cryptic nature and a hostile moral. Before analysing the uses that Lewis made of Story I will look at the kinds of coherence and at the ethical values historically attributed to Story as a structure of meaning and to the short story as a modern genre in order to reach a fuller understanding of the kind of fiction that Lewis was promoting.


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