About Time

Narrative, Fiction and the Philosophy of Time

Mark Currie author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:12th Oct '10

Should be back in stock very soon

About Time cover

Why have theorists approached narrative primarily as a form of retrospect? Mark Currie argues that anticipation and other forms of projection into the future are vital for an understanding of narrative and its effects in the world. In a series of arguments and readings, he offers an account of narrative as both anticipation and retrospection, linking fictional time experiments (in Ali Smith, Ian McEwan, Martin Amis and Graham Swift) to exhilarating philosophical themes about presence and futurity. This is an argument that shows that narrative lies at the heart of modern experiences of time, structuring the present, whether personal or collective, as the object of a future memory as much as it records the past.

...one of the first of many books we can expect to explore this newly enlarged literary critical terrain, and it supplies a complex, original and compelling avenue of entry...a very useful examination of a variety of thinkers who have received little attention in contemporary literary discussions of time...a rigorous, innovative, and revealing approach to the material. -- Jane Elliot, University of York * Novel: A Forum on Fiction *
...a very useful examination of a variety of thinkers who have received little attention in contemporary literary discussions of time...a rigorous, innovative, and revealing approach to the material. -- Novel: A Forum on Fiction

ISBN: 9780748642465

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

176 pages