The Ethics of Narrative: Essays on History, Literature, and Theory, 1998-2007
Hayden White et al.
Published:
2024
Online ISBN:
9781501765056
Print ISBN:
9781501764738
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The Ethics of Narrative: Essays on History, Literature, and Theory, 1998-2007
Hayden White andMieke Bal (contributor)
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Hayden White
Pages
186–201
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Published:
January 2024
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White, Hayden, and Robert Doran, 'Exile and Abjection [2006]', in Robert Doran (ed.), The Ethics of Narrative: Essays on History, Literature, and Theory, 1998-2007 (
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Abstract
This chapter introduces the key concepts of exile and abjection. Initially, exile was a punishment but now, in modern times, it is often considered to be a metaphor for a certain kind of person or condition with appropriate modifiers. Modernity is characterized by the transformation of a world once conceived as a congeries of places gradually being transformed. Thus, the notion of exile has a purely historical interest, its relevance to time consists of the extent to which it allows the identification of what people lost or the price they paid for entrance into the condition of modernity. The chapter offers further definitions of exile in line with the notions of place and community.
Keywords: exile, abjection, modernity, historical interest, community, metaphor, place
Subject
Literary Studies (20th Century onwards)
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