Detalls del llibre
O'Connor's stories and novels are usually considered mere dramatizations of her stated orthodox religious commitments. According to the predominant view, the typical O'Connor work consists of a set of corrupt characters and an authoritative narrator who analyzes their theological errors. When redemption occurs, according to this view, it results from forces outside the character and against that character's will.
Although such a reading adequately describes a few works, it misunderstands O'Connor's general handling of narration and of characterization. Marshall Bruce Gentry proposes new positions on O'Connor's narration and on the role of the grotesque in her characterization. By investigating the nature of religious experience in her works, he concludes that O'Connor's primary interest is redemption achieved by grotesque and unconscious means.
Often in O'Connor's works, redemption becomes a moment of freedom in a continuing process of degradation and reformation. The real focus of O'Connor's fiction is the grotesque path toward redemption. As Gentry points out, by sending themselves toward physical annihilation, her characters typically take control of their redemption.
- Autor/a Marshall Bruce Gentry
- ISBN13 9781578068654
- ISBN10 1578068657
- Pàgines 177
- Any Edició 1986
- Fecha de publicación 03/05/1986
- Idioma Alemany, Francès
Ressenyes i valoracions
Flannery O'Connor's Religion of the Grotesque (Alemany, Francès)
- De
- Marshall Bruce Gentry
- |
- University Press of Mississippi (1986)
- 9781578068654



