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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    Tuscaloosa [u.a.] :Univ. of Alabama Press,
    UID:
    almafu_BV009801437
    Format: XIII, 210 S.
    ISBN: 0-8173-0717-6
    Content: The Narrative Secret of Flannery O'Connor provides new insights into the full corpus of O'Connors fiction by exploring the intersection of O'Connor's artistic intentions and her religions preoccupations. Johansen looks first at how the stories create meaning in order to explain what they mean. Drawing on a variety of critical methods from narratology, anthropology, mythology, and reader response criticism, this study invites us to reconsider O'Connor's complex and enigmatic texts through their structures and actions. By focusing on the interplay of O'Connor's narrative structures, the human psyche, and the institutions and traditions of our collective history - particularly ancient myths and legends - Johansen illuminates the relation between narration, the self, and spiritual transformation
    Content: O'Connor's narratives employ figures, gestures, and actions that work to deceive or disorient the reader. These havoc-wreaking forces in and among the stories most resemble the archetypal trickster. Johansen demonstrates that, through such tricksteresque activity, O'Connor's narratives push the reader to acknowledge the perverse, violent, and often disorderly aspects of human and divine behavior
    Content: The religious secret of O'Connor narratives - revealed in shimmering environments where narration and incarnation meet - is that both evil and good, the grotesque and the ideal, violence and peace, Satan and God, the human and the divine exist together in sacred unity. O'Connor's literary secret, through which she discloses the religious one, is to tell stories that return human beings to original mythic events. By recasting these events in contemporary fiction, with the assistance of the trickster, she performs a ritual function that is as necessary in an individualistic, technological age as it is in a communitarian, primitive one
    Language: English
    Subjects: American Studies
    RVK:
    Keywords: 1925-1964 O'Connor, Flannery ; Erzähltechnik ; Religion ; 1925-1964 O'Connor, Flannery ; Trickster ; Hochschulschrift
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_1677135956
    Format: xiv, 253 pages , 24 cm
    ISBN: 9780881466966 , 0881466964
    Content: Preface : "The red virgin" and "The red clay virgin" -- Two twentieth-century women and the world -- The poetics of philosophy and fiction -- Attention and apprenticeship : Simone Weil's "Reflections on the right use of school studies with a view to the love of God," "The love of our neighbor," and Notebooks : Flannery O'Connor's "The artificial nigger" and "The displaced person" -- Beauty and charity : Simone Weil's "Letter to a priest," Notebooks, and "Love of the order of the world" : Flannery O'Connor's "Good country people," "The lame shall enter first," and "Revelation" -- Suffering and affliction : Simone Weil's "The love of God and affliction" : Flannery O'Connor's "The enduring chill" and The violent bear it away -- Grace and decreation : Simone Weil's "Forms of the implicit love of God" and Notebooks : Flannery O'Connor's "A good man is hard to find" and "A view of the woods" -- Conclusion : the enduring world.
    Content: Explores the intersection between the philosophy of Simone Weil from Paris, France, and the fiction of Flannery O'Connor from the Southern state of Georgia, USA
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages [233]-242) and index
    Language: English
    Keywords: Weil, Simone 1909-1943 ; O'Connor, Flannery 1925-1964 ; Philosophie ; Literatur
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  • 3
    UID:
    almahu_9948310191902882
    Format: 236 p.
    Edition: Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2015. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Berkeley :University of California Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9959245619902883
    Format: 1 online resource (248 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 0-520-92776-1 , 1-59734-717-5
    Content: Traumatic brain injury can interrupt without warning the life story that any one of us is in the midst of creating. When the author's fifteen-year-old son survives a terrible car crash in spite of massive trauma to his brain, she and her family know only that his story has not ended. Their efforts, Erik's own efforts, and those of everyone who helps bring him from deep coma to new life make up a moving and inspiring story for us all, one that invites us to reconsider the very nature of "self" and selfhood. Ruthann Knechel Johansen, who teaches literature and narrative theory, is a particularly eloquent witness to the silent space in which her son, confronted with life-shattering injury and surrounded by conflicting narratives about his viability, is somehow reborn. She describes the time of crisis and medical intervention as an hour-by-hour struggle to communicate with the medical world on the one hand and the everyday world of family and friends on the other. None of them knows how much, or even whether, they can communicate with the wounded child who is lost from himself and everything he knew. Through this experience of utter disintegration, Johansen comes to realize that self-identity is molded and sustained by stories. As Erik regains movement and consciousness, his parents, younger sister, doctors, therapists, educators, and friends all contribute to a web of language and narrative that gradually enables his body, mind, and feelings to make sense of their reacquired functions. Like those who know and love him, the young man feels intense grief and anger for the loss of the self he was before the accident, yet he is the first to see continuity where they see only change. The story is breathtaking, because we become involved in the pain and suspense and faith that accompany every birth. Medical and rehabilitation professionals, social workers, psychotherapists, students of narrative, and anyone who has faced life's trauma will find hope in this meditation on selfhood: out of the shambles of profound brain injury and coma can arise fruitful lives and deepened relationships. Keywords: narrative; selfhood; therapy; traumatic brain injury; healing; spirituality; family crisis; children
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Frontmatter -- , CONTENTS -- , Preface -- , Introduction -- , 1. The Origins of Global Community -- , 2. The New Internationalism -- , 3. Beyond the Cold War -- , 4. More States, More Nonstate Actors -- , 5. The Growth of Civil Society -- , 6. Toward Global Community -- , Conclusion -- , Notes -- , Index , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-520-23114-7
    Language: English
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