24. Students' Choice Novel: Jonathan Safran Foer, Everything is Illuminated

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июл 2024
  • The American Novel Since 1945 (ENGL 291)
    In this first of two lectures on the students' choice end-of-semester novel, Jonathan Safran Foer's Everything is Illuminated (2002), Professor Hungerford models several methods for approaching and evaluating a new work of fiction. She shows how Foer borrows and adapts themes and styles from other authors on the syllabus in service to his ambition as a writer to demonstrate the power of narrative fiction to address the great historical traumas of our time. In thus attempting to marry the nineteenth-century social novel with Postmodernist, or late Modernist, techniques, Foer participates in an emerging tradition that risks the confusion between resonant emotion and sentimental cliché.
    00:00 - Chapter 1. Foer's Formative Ambition
    03:58 - Chapter 2. Dialog with the Literary Tradition
    11:23 - Chapter 3. Absence at the Heart of Desire: Foer's Negative Spaces
    22:05 - Chapter 4. Bringing Together Sentiment and Formal Play: A Social Postmodern Novel
    26:39 - Chapter 5. The Campus Novel
    31:32 - Chapter 6. Sentiment vs. Sentimentality
    Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: open.yale.edu/courses
    This course was recorded in Spring 2008.

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