The narrative secret of Flannery O'Connor

the trickster as interpreter

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April 28, 2010 | History

The narrative secret of Flannery O'Connor

the trickster as interpreter

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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.

  1. 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.

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.

With its emphasis on narrative structures, this investigation of O'Connor's writing holds significance for other literature studies because it enables readers to see what results from the common failure to understand the interdependence of narration and incarnation: a reduction of both literature and religion to barren systems insulating people from mythic truths rather than pulling them toward freedom.

This book discloses the double function of language through which spiritual, intellectual, and even social transformations become possible. On the one hand, language erects a cultural canon to secure people against fear of freedom and the threat of chaos. On the other hand, when language playfully subverts the canon by returning it to its wild, forgotten origins for renewal, it challenges human beings to free themselves from dying religious metaphors and decaying social institutions.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
210

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: The narrative secret of Flannery O'Connor
The narrative secret of Flannery O'Connor: the trickster as interpreter
1994, University of Alabama Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. [189]-204) and index.

Published in
Tuscaloosa

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
813/.54
Library of Congress
PS3565.C57 Z717 1994

The Physical Object

Pagination
xiii, 210 p. ;
Number of pages
210

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1420788M
Internet Archive
narrativesecreto0000joha
ISBN 10
0817307176
LCCN
93030919
OCLC/WorldCat
28631574
Goodreads
725863

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History

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December 4, 2010 Edited by Open Library Bot Added subjects from MARC records.