The Narrative Of Clan Clustering In Two American Novels

Bruce Benderson’s The Romanian (2006) and Andrei Codrescu’s The Poetry “Lesson” (2010) promote a somewhat clannish agenda, enduring in story telling despite the pluralistic kind of society the North Atlantic mainstream culture pledges to build. Way too diverse in kind and nature to be safely defined...

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Main Author: Colăcel, Onoriu
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.495126
https://zenodo.org/record/495126
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.495126 2023-05-15T17:33:38+02:00 The Narrative Of Clan Clustering In Two American Novels Colăcel, Onoriu 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.495126 https://zenodo.org/record/495126 unknown Zenodo Open Access Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC-BY tribalism, Romanian, Western, narrative Text Journal article article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.495126 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Bruce Benderson’s The Romanian (2006) and Andrei Codrescu’s The Poetry “Lesson” (2010) promote a somewhat clannish agenda, enduring in story telling despite the pluralistic kind of society the North Atlantic mainstream culture pledges to build. Way too diverse in kind and nature to be safely defined, this view of the world readily available in Western narrative fiction accounts for much of the bias still displayed presently by the novel genre. Explicitly, the cultural backdrop of (Eastern) otherness against which the plot unfolds is the litmus test of the professed inclusive values of the cosmopolitan Westerner. The metropolitan cultures’ competence in policing the civilizational divide between the many worlds available inside and outside the American-European cultural continuum shows through the pages of the books. For example, the two English-written novels dwell on the marginal Romanian identity in order to narrate the world-making patterns of fictional invention. The American Bruce Benderson employs extensively the stock language of orientalism, while the American-naturalized Romanian Andrei Codrescu touches on the identity narratives of his home country. Conclusively, I find that both narrators largely exemplify the value-laden language of narration in terms of instrumentalizing the ethos of the E. U. enlargement and the European heritage. Text North Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic tribalism, Romanian, Western, narrative
spellingShingle tribalism, Romanian, Western, narrative
Colăcel, Onoriu
The Narrative Of Clan Clustering In Two American Novels
topic_facet tribalism, Romanian, Western, narrative
description Bruce Benderson’s The Romanian (2006) and Andrei Codrescu’s The Poetry “Lesson” (2010) promote a somewhat clannish agenda, enduring in story telling despite the pluralistic kind of society the North Atlantic mainstream culture pledges to build. Way too diverse in kind and nature to be safely defined, this view of the world readily available in Western narrative fiction accounts for much of the bias still displayed presently by the novel genre. Explicitly, the cultural backdrop of (Eastern) otherness against which the plot unfolds is the litmus test of the professed inclusive values of the cosmopolitan Westerner. The metropolitan cultures’ competence in policing the civilizational divide between the many worlds available inside and outside the American-European cultural continuum shows through the pages of the books. For example, the two English-written novels dwell on the marginal Romanian identity in order to narrate the world-making patterns of fictional invention. The American Bruce Benderson employs extensively the stock language of orientalism, while the American-naturalized Romanian Andrei Codrescu touches on the identity narratives of his home country. Conclusively, I find that both narrators largely exemplify the value-laden language of narration in terms of instrumentalizing the ethos of the E. U. enlargement and the European heritage.
format Text
author Colăcel, Onoriu
author_facet Colăcel, Onoriu
author_sort Colăcel, Onoriu
title The Narrative Of Clan Clustering In Two American Novels
title_short The Narrative Of Clan Clustering In Two American Novels
title_full The Narrative Of Clan Clustering In Two American Novels
title_fullStr The Narrative Of Clan Clustering In Two American Novels
title_full_unstemmed The Narrative Of Clan Clustering In Two American Novels
title_sort narrative of clan clustering in two american novels
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.495126
https://zenodo.org/record/495126
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_rights Open Access
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.495126
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