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Flat Protagonists Marta Figlerowicz (Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Yale University)

Flat Protagonists By Marta Figlerowicz (Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Yale University)

Summary

We've all encountered protagonists who become more complicated over the course of a novel, but what does one do with a protagonist who simplifies as a novel progresses? This book examines such flat protagonists and shows why their existence challenges our current understanding of the novel as a genre.

Flat Protagonists Summary

Flat Protagonists: A Theory of Novel Character by Marta Figlerowicz (Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Yale University)

We've all encountered protagonists who, over the course of a novel, turn out to be more complicated than we thought at first. But what does one do with a major character who simplifies as a novel progresses, to the point where even this novel's other characters begin to disregard him? Flat Protagonists shows that writers have undertaken such formal experiments-which give rise to its titular flat protagonists-since the novel's incipience. It finds such characters in British and French novels ranging from the late-seventeenth to the early-twentieth century by Aphra Behn, Isabelle de Charriere, Francoise de Graffigny, Thomas Hardy, and Marcel Proust. Marta Figlerowicz argues that these uncommon flat protagonists challenge our larger views about the novel as a genre. Upending a longstanding tradition of valuing characters for their complexity, Figlerowicz proposes that novels, and their characters, should be appreciated for highlighting the limits to how much attention any particular person's self-expression tends to garner, and how much insight anyone has to offer her community. As invitations to consider how we might come across to others, rather than merely how others come across to us, flat protagonists both subvert and complement the more conventional approach to novels as, at their best, sites of instruction in interpersonal empathy.

Flat Protagonists Reviews

This new theory of character not only asksus to doubt the critical emphasis on character as a source of the richness, complexity and enduring interest of a novel; it asks us to rethink our own significance in relation to the wider world. * Kate Symondson, Times Literary Supplement *

About Marta Figlerowicz (Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Yale University)

Marta Figlerowicz is Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English at Yale University.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter One : The Prince Chapter Two: The Writer Chapter Three: The Misfit Chapter Four: The Solipsist Conclusion Works Cited

Additional information

NPB9780190496760
9780190496760
0190496762
Flat Protagonists: A Theory of Novel Character by Marta Figlerowicz (Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Yale University)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2017-01-26
208
N/A
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