WATERLAND: A POSTMODERN STORY OF REVOLUTION
Abstract
This study analyzes Waterland as a postmodern Bildungsroman by emphasizing its poststructuralist content and form. Graham Swift’s novel reflects the postmodern individual’s infinite quest to understand himself and the world. The quest reveals a post-structural essence that is marked with concepts such as différance and cyclicality where meaning is infinitely differed. Thus, the Existenz of the postmodern individual bears a fluid, in other words cyclical nature, which is also reflected in the novel’s new historicist approach to reality and history. This study aspires to display the temporality of Existenz which is shaped in relation to social structure and to the interpretation of life’s significance in a postmodernist paradigm.
Keywords
References
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Details
Primary Language
English
Subjects
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Journal Section
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Authors
Publication Date
July 9, 2015
Submission Date
July 9, 2015
Acceptance Date
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Published in Issue
Year 1970 Volume: 39 Number: 2