Daughter of the Swan - Love and Knowledge in Eudora Welty's Fiction (Hardcover)


Readers of Eudora Welty's stories often encounter a protective and domelike night-time sky, the moon and constellations beckoning a character to venture beyond the familiar, visible world. This striking metaphor for the human need to seek out the unknown serves as an anchoring image in ""Daughter of the Swan"", Gail L. Mortimer's study of Welty's lifelong inquiry into the nature and contexts of knowledge. Mortimer argues that Welty's views on epistemiology and the elusiveness of certainty lie at the heart of this writer's subtle and revelatory work. Employing the psychoanalytic object-relations theories of Nancy Chodorow and Carol Gilligan, she reveals how Welty uses assumptions about relationships to shape her character's consciousnesses. Mortimer also contrasts Welty's world with William Faulkner's; each elucidates the other's remarkably different ways of perceiving humanity, relationships and approaches to the unknown. The author then turns to Welty's childhood to consider her evolving sense of what - and how - things can be known. Her childhood reading and, in particular, her relationships with adults created impressions of a benign, wondrous, orderly world. As Mortimer observes, Welty eventually replaced these impressions with the realisation that adults frequently distort and withhold the truth. Welty's own family's conception of love as a kind of shield, and her resistance to this protection, finds its way into much of her fiction. For many Welty characters, this protective love becomes an obstacle to fuller understanding. Mortimer invokes two of the writer's most beguiling images, the circle and the labyrinth, to demonstrate that ""the perceiver"" who is ""both an insider and an outsider"" is best able to recognise and assimilate new knowledge. In ""The Golden Apples"" Welty contemplates the difficulty and fascination implicit in this quest for knowledge, given the ambiguous nature of what we know - and given our use of language's surfaces, and of masks, myths and falsities to create benevolent illusions. Ultimately, Mortimer concludes, Welty comes to see the concept of protective love as a limited one and, in ""The Optimist's Daughter"", for instance, she advocates instead the courage to face even the harshest realities. Recognising the richness of Welty's artistry, Mortimer views her through the lens of various literary traditions, incuding that of Shelley and Yeats. The latter's poem ""Among School Children"", from which the title of Mortimer's study is borrowed, summons the image of the swan to reflect the solitary human soul in search of knowledge. In that same spirit of wonder and curiosity, Eudora Welty's fiction illuminates the conditions of that search.

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Product Description

Readers of Eudora Welty's stories often encounter a protective and domelike night-time sky, the moon and constellations beckoning a character to venture beyond the familiar, visible world. This striking metaphor for the human need to seek out the unknown serves as an anchoring image in ""Daughter of the Swan"", Gail L. Mortimer's study of Welty's lifelong inquiry into the nature and contexts of knowledge. Mortimer argues that Welty's views on epistemiology and the elusiveness of certainty lie at the heart of this writer's subtle and revelatory work. Employing the psychoanalytic object-relations theories of Nancy Chodorow and Carol Gilligan, she reveals how Welty uses assumptions about relationships to shape her character's consciousnesses. Mortimer also contrasts Welty's world with William Faulkner's; each elucidates the other's remarkably different ways of perceiving humanity, relationships and approaches to the unknown. The author then turns to Welty's childhood to consider her evolving sense of what - and how - things can be known. Her childhood reading and, in particular, her relationships with adults created impressions of a benign, wondrous, orderly world. As Mortimer observes, Welty eventually replaced these impressions with the realisation that adults frequently distort and withhold the truth. Welty's own family's conception of love as a kind of shield, and her resistance to this protection, finds its way into much of her fiction. For many Welty characters, this protective love becomes an obstacle to fuller understanding. Mortimer invokes two of the writer's most beguiling images, the circle and the labyrinth, to demonstrate that ""the perceiver"" who is ""both an insider and an outsider"" is best able to recognise and assimilate new knowledge. In ""The Golden Apples"" Welty contemplates the difficulty and fascination implicit in this quest for knowledge, given the ambiguous nature of what we know - and given our use of language's surfaces, and of masks, myths and falsities to create benevolent illusions. Ultimately, Mortimer concludes, Welty comes to see the concept of protective love as a limited one and, in ""The Optimist's Daughter"", for instance, she advocates instead the courage to face even the harshest realities. Recognising the richness of Welty's artistry, Mortimer views her through the lens of various literary traditions, incuding that of Shelley and Yeats. The latter's poem ""Among School Children"", from which the title of Mortimer's study is borrowed, summons the image of the swan to reflect the solitary human soul in search of knowledge. In that same spirit of wonder and curiosity, Eudora Welty's fiction illuminates the conditions of that search.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

University of Georgia Press

Country of origin

United States

Release date

October 1994

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

October 1994

Authors

Dimensions

229 x 152 x 25mm (L x W x T)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

264

ISBN-13

978-0-8203-1633-8

Barcode

9780820316338

Categories

LSN

0-8203-1633-4



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