 |
Janis Tedesco
Haswell
Paul Scott's Philosophy
of Place(s)
The Fiction
of Relationality
(Lang, Peter Publishing, Incorporated 2002)
Publisher's comments:
This revisionist study of the novels of Paul Scott breaks new
ground in literary and postcolonial discourse. Using previously
unpublished archival materials and contemporary place theory as
fulcrums to examine Scott's narrative method, Janis E. Haswell examines
what she calls Scott's narrative of relationality--his mastery of
multiple perspective and juxtaposition of images, characters, sites,
and events. This book shows how the theme of connection valorizes
the singular self and the cohesive power of life-narratives in the
Raj Quartet and earlier works. Scott's philosophy of places(s)
relates both to England's imperial past and, more broadly, to contemporary
views of self and identity.
Dr. Haswell is Associate Professor of English at Texas A&M University-Corpus
Christi
back
|