In the Company of Strangers shows how a reconception of family and kinship underlies the revolutionary experiments of the modernist novel. While stories of marriage and long-lost relatives were a mainstay of classic Victorian fiction, Barry Mc Crea suggests that rival countercurrents within these family plots set the stage for the formal innovations of Joyce and Proust. Tracing the challenges to the family plot mounted by figures such as Fagin, Sherlock Holmes, Leopold Bloom, and Charles Swann, Mc Crea tells the story of how bonds generated by chance encounters between strangers come to take over the role of organizing narrative time and give shape to fictional worlds—a task and power that was once the preserve of the genealogical family. By investigating how the question of family is a hidden key to modernist structure and style,
In the Company of Strangers explores the formal narrative potential of queerness and in doing so rewrites the history of the modern novel.
Jadual kandungan
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I
1. Queer Expectations
2. Holmes at Home
Part II
Introduction
3. Family and Form in Ulysses
4. Proust’s Farewell to the Family
Notes
Index
Mengenai Pengarang
Barry Mc Crea is associate professor of comparative literature and English at Yale University and author of a novel,
The First Verse.