Overview

For half a century, J. Hillis Miller has been a premier figure in English and comparative literature, influencing and leading the direction of literary studies. What is less well-known is that he has been equally influential in Conrad studies with his work on nihilism, language, and narrative in Joseph Conrad's fiction. Returning to Conrad at different stages of his long career--reading and rereading him in light of new critical trends--Miller continually discovered new aspects of the influential author's fiction. This volume, edited by John G. Peters and Jakob Lothe, charts Miller's shifting insights into Joseph Conrad's fiction and also highlights the potential of Conrad studies to illuminate core questions in studies of narrative theory, aesthetics, and history.

 

Reading Conrad by J. Hillis Miller demonstrates a surprising cohesiveness across Miller's career as well as the richness of Conrad's fiction, which affords varied opportunities for critical approaches as different as phenomenology, new criticism, deconstruction, narrative theory, and narrative ethics. Miller's analyses emphasize literature's rhetorical and performative power, ultimately suggesting that while narrative fiction is an effect of a series of complex phenomena in society and in the human psyche, as literary language it can also refer to the external world indirectly and contribute to the formation of history from within. 

 

ISBN-13

9780814254356

ISBN-10

0814254357

Weight

1.00 Pounds

Dimensions

6.00 x 0.80 x 9.00 In

List Price

$35.95

Format

Paperback

Language

English

Pages

340 pages

Publisher

Ohio State University Press

Published On

2017-11-13



View All Offers

Sort by:

Condition
Seller
Seller Comments
Price
Brand New
Seller details
Alibris
★★★★★

Sparks, NV, USA

Print on demand Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 340 p. Theory and Interpretation of Narrative.
$49.53

 Free delivery by: 01 Apr 2026


Bookstores.com relies on cookies to improve your experience.