Skip to product information
1 of 1

Communities in Fiction

Regular price $105.00
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $105.00
Sold out
Communities in Fiction reads in detail six novels or stories (one each by Trollope, Hardy, Conrad, Woolf, Pynchon, and Cervantes) in the light of theories of community worked out (contradictorily) ...
Read More
  • 02 December 2014
View Product Details

Communities in Fiction reads six novels or stories (one each by Trollope, Hardy, Conrad, Woolf, Pynchon, and Cervantes) in the light of theories of community worked out (contradictorily) by Raymond Williams, Martin Heidegger, and Jean- Luc Nancy.

The book’s topic is the question of how communities or noncommunities are represented in fictional works. Such fictional communities help the reader understand real communities, including those in which the reader lives. As against the presumption that the trajectory in literature from Victorian to modern to postmodern is the story of a gradual loss of belief in the possibility of community, this book demonstrates that communities have always been presented in fiction as precarious and fractured. Moreover, the juxtaposition of Pynchon and Cervantes in the last chapter demonstrates that period characterizations are never to be trusted. All the features both thematic and formal that recent critics and theorists such as Fredric Jameson and many others have found to characterize postmodern fiction are already present in Cervantes’s wonderful early-seventeenth-century “Exemplary Story,” “The Dogs’ Colloquy.” All the themes and narrative devices of Western fiction from the beginning of the print era to the present were there at the beginning, in Cervantes

Most of all, however, Communities in Fiction looks in detail at its six fictions, striving to see just what they say, what stories they tell, and what narratological and rhetorical devices they use to say what they do say and to tell the stories they do tell. The book attempts to communicate to its readers the joy of reading these works and to argue for the exemplary insight they provide into what Heidegger called Mitsein— being together in communities that are always problematic and unstable.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $105.00
Pages: 352
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Imprint: Fordham University Press
Series: Commonalities
Publication Date: 02 December 2014
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780823263103
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, LITERARY CRITICISM / European / Spanish & Portuguese
REVIEWS Icon
J. Hillis Miller's Communities in Fiction is a magnificent repondering of the Victorian novel's ability to render consciousness of self and other. Lucid and urbane, the book is a model of theoretical investigation that would be perfectly accessible to a nonspecialist reader.

“What brings Communities in Fiction its true distinction is the facility and creativity with which Miller retrofits each of the major artifacts in his purview to his communal ‘reality testing.’ Communities in Fiction is a work utterly remarkable for its mastery, its erudition, its theoretical creativity, and its good sense. This wonderful volume is truly delightful.”---—Henry Sussman, Yale University

Like Trollope, one of his subjects here, Hillis Miller has long perfected a style of warmly conversational lucidity. He communicates his pleasures and his perplexities as he guides you through readings that are at once leisurely and compelling.---—Rachel Bowlby, Princeton University

...this is an improbably moving, in places disturbing book. In its understated way, Communities in Fiction makes a quietly compelling case for how these old books can help us think our current situation.

Miller’s Communities in Fiction examines the agonistic structure of communities: how the singularity of individual parts disrupt the organizing rationales they also seek to unite. Careful exposition of six novelists allows him to reflect on fictional representations of community as well as the communities that contextualize his study: his immediate disciplinary setting, the future of the humanities, and the political climate of the United States.