Out of the core of experience, these essays began as obsessions. Whether founded in some strongly lived moment, deeply held conviction, long-term interest, or persistent and unanswered question, these essays reveal the writer's voice--personal, often passionate, full of conviction, certainly unmistakable. Marianna Torgovnick has drawn together writings by leading contemporary scholars in the humanities, representing fields of literary criticism, American and Romance studies, anthropology, and art history. "Eloquent Obsessions" presents cultural criticism at its thoughtful and writerly best.
This collection explores a wide range of issues at the intersection of personal and social history--from growing up in the South to exploring a love for France or Japan, from coming of age as a feminist to mapping the history of "National Geographic," from examining the cultural "we" to diagnosing class structures in Israel or showing how photography deals with AIDS. The authors here bring writerly genres--autobiography, memoir, or travel narrative--to intellectual tasks such as textual readings or investigating the histories of institutions. Continuing a tradition of cultural criticism established by writers such as Samuel Johnson, Zora Neale Hurston, Edmund Wilson, Hannah Arendt, or Raymond Williams, these essays seek to make a difference, to have an impact, and are based on the fundamental premise that writers have something to say about society. Simply put, this collection offers models for writing eloquently about culture--models that are intellectually and socially responsible, but attuned to the critic's voice and the reader's ear.
Aimed not just at academics but also at a more general audience alive to the concerns and interests of society today, "Eloquent Obsessions," a revised and expanded version of a special issue of "South Atlantic Quarterly" (Winter 1992), will extend beyond the academy contemporary ways of writing about culture. "Contributors." Jane Collins, Cathy N. Davidson, Virginia R. Dominguez, Mark Edmundson, Gerald Graff, Richard Inglis, Aldona Jonaitis, Alice Yaeger Kaplan, Catherine Lutz, Nancy K. Miller, Linda Orr, Andrew Ross, Henry M. Sayre, Jane Tompkins, Marianna Torgovnick
评分
评分
评分
评分
坦率地说,这本书的结构精巧得令人拍案叫绝,它更像是一部精心编排的交响乐,而不是简单的故事叙述。不同时间线、不同视角的片段被巧妙地穿插、交织,形成了一种独特的韵律感。初读时,这种碎片化的叙事方式可能会让人感到些许迷茫,但坚持下去,你会发现每一个看似不相关的碎片都在最后汇聚成一幅宏大而清晰的图景。我特别欣赏作者在氛围营造上的功力,那种弥漫在字里行间的疏离感和某种难以言喻的紧张,让人仿佛能闻到墨水的味道,甚至感觉到纸张的粗糙纹理。它不是那种让你捧着就想一口气读完的爆米花小说,它需要你投入心力去品味那些留白之处,去捕捉那些不易察觉的暗示。读完最后一章,我有一种强烈的冲动,想要立刻翻回开头,重新审视那些一开始被忽略的细节,因为我知道,真正的精髓藏在那些被时间反复打磨的角落里。
评分这部作品简直是一场心灵的探险,作者以其细腻入微的笔触,构建了一个扑朔迷离的叙事迷宫。阅读的初期,我感到自己像一个初入古堡的旅人,对周围的一切充满了好奇与警惕。故事情节的推进并非一蹴而就,而是如同慢火熬煮的浓汤,每一页都蕴含着深沉的滋味。人物的塑造尤其令人印象深刻,那些活生生的人物,他们的挣扎、他们的抉择,都让人在心底留下深深的烙印。我常常在夜深人静时合上书本,久久地沉浸在他们的世界里,思考着那些关于人性与命运的宏大命题。作者似乎有一种魔力,能够将最日常的场景描绘得充满张力,让平凡的对话都蕴含着不为人知的暗流涌动。这本书的魅力就在于它的复杂性,它拒绝提供简单的答案,而是鼓励读者自己去挖掘、去构建属于自己的理解。那种被智力挑战和情感共鸣交织在一起的感觉,实在令人欲罢不能。
评分这本书的文字风格简直是华丽而又克制的典范。作者的词汇量之丰富,描述之精准,令人叹为观止,但这一切都服务于故事本身,从未流于炫技。那些关于环境的描摹,像是大师级的油画,光影的运用达到了出神入化的地步,每一个形容词都恰到好处,没有一丝多余。我尤其钟爱作者对内心独白的刻画,那种深入骨髓的、近乎哲学思辨的沉思,将角色的内在世界剖析得淋漓尽致。阅读过程更像是一场私人化的对话,作者邀请我进入一个只有我们两人知晓的秘密空间,共同面对那些尖锐的、甚至有些令人不安的真相。它探讨的主题非常深刻,关乎记忆的不可靠性、个体存在的边界,以及时间对意义的侵蚀。这本书需要的不仅仅是眼睛,更需要一颗愿意沉浸、愿意反思的心。
评分从文学技法的角度来看,这本书无疑是一座难以逾越的高峰。作者对叙事视角的切换处理得炉火纯青,高明之处在于,即使视角不断转换,读者也始终能清晰地把握住核心的叙事脉络,这需要极高的掌控力。故事的底色是略显阴郁的,但通篇没有陷入无病呻吟的矫情,而是用一种近乎冰冷的理性去解剖人性中的弱点与光芒。它探讨了“真实”的构建过程,揭示了我们赖以生存的许多认知框架其实是多么脆弱和主观。与那些试图一味讨好读者的作品不同,这本书保持了一种高傲的距离感,它不迎合,只呈现。正是这种不妥协的态度,才成就了它独特的文学价值,让它有资格跻身于那些值得反复阅读、每次都有新发现的经典之列。
评分我必须承认,这本书的节奏把握极具个人特色,它并非那种传统意义上的“流畅”。有那么几章,情节推进得极其缓慢,仿佛时间被凝固了,专注于描绘某个特定的瞬间或某种情绪的累积。起初我有些不耐烦,但很快就理解了作者的意图:他不是在赶路,而是在雕刻。这些看似缓慢的段落,实际上是整部作品的情感基石,它们为后来的爆发蓄积了必要的力量。这种先抑后扬的叙事手法,使得当关键的转折点到来时,冲击力达到了最大化。它挑战了现代读者对“效率”的阅读期待,强迫我们放慢脚步,去关注那些被快节奏生活所忽略的细微情感波动。读完后,我感觉自己的“阅读肌肉”得到了极佳的锻炼,学会了欣赏那种沉静的力量。
评分 评分 评分 评分 评分本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有