1887
Keeping Ourselves Alive
  • ISSN 1053-6981
  • E-ISSN: 2405-9374
GBP
Buy:£15.00 + Taxes

Abstract

AbstractIn the historical event of the American Revolution, as well as in certain central texts of the American literary imagination, a tension between the power of a community to define itself through language and the resistance of experiential history to such enclosure is represented through a particular form of narrative silence. This narrative form may first suggest repression and the failures of memory. But the American imagination has used narrative silence as a way of representing events that lie outside of the known and planned, in order to preserve the residual life of experience and so to bear witness to the imagina-tion's dependence on the whole of history. In this essay, I argue that this narrative form reveals a central paradox of the American cultural imagination: This imagination successfully encodes its story of community exactly insofar as it creates a place—in language and in thought—for the safely silent acknowl-edgement of the power of experiential knowledge and untold secrets. (Culture studies; literary criticism)

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journals/10.1075/jnlh.3.2-3.11nar
1993-01-01
2024-04-19
Loading full text...

Full text loading...

http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/journals/10.1075/jnlh.3.2-3.11nar
Loading
  • Article Type: Research Article
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was successful
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error