Gestures of Healing shows how the dominant novelists of American and British modernism - James, Conrad, Ford, Forster, Joyce, Woolf, Lawrence, Fitzgerald, Hemingway and Faulkner - express a common condition of pain: anxiety produced by the experience of chaos in the self. John J. Clayton seeks the source of this condition not in reference to ""modern society"" nor in philosophical trends, but rather in the families of these writers. Clayton argues that although their situations were very different, these writers had in common certain patterns (particularly a weak or absent father and a central, strong-willed mother) that, in the absence of coherent grounding in the community, shaped a fragmented, incomplete self. After tracing the often tragic effects of modernist anxiety on the writers' lives, Clayton explores how the fiction created by each author gestures toward healing. He shows how the writers ""use"" the reader, much as a patient ""uses"" an analyst, and how the culture that enthroned modernism looked to it for the same healing. ""Gestures of Healing"" concludes with extended studies of James, Lawrence and Woolf.
ISBN: | 9780870237393 |
Publication date: | 31st August 1991 |
Author: | John Jacob Clayton |
Publisher: | University of Massachusetts Press |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 230 pages |
Genres: |
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000 |