William F. Edmiston revises current theories of what narratologists
call "focalization" and applies his revised theory to four eighteenth-century
French memoir-novels.
Hindsight and Insight contributes to our knowledge of the
history and evolution of the novel by demonstrating that France's
earliest novelists were already engaged in the kinds of narrative
experimentation that are usually associated with modern writers.
It presents an analysis of the narrative point of view in both its
theoretical aspects and its practical applications. Edmiston exposes
the inadequacies of current concepts of focalization and proposes
a revised concept that is applicable to personal narration, one
that can accommodate all the focal possibilities available to the
first-person narrator. He applies this concept to four French memoir-novels: Les Egarements du coeur et de l'esprit by Crébillon, Le Payson parvenu by Marivaux, Manon Lescaut by Prévost,
and La Religieuse by Diderot.
Each of these well-known novels offers a different case study and
raises specific theoretical questions of selective focalization,
forms of reported speech, problems of temporal ambiguity, manipulation
of the reader, narratorial reliability, and cognitive privilege.
Edmiston's study proposes a reading of the novels that resolves
certain problems of interpretation raised by other recent studies. |