Hesitant Heroes
Private Inhibition, Cultural Crisis
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cornell University Press
Published:8th Dec '03
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Why, Theodore Ziolkowski wonders, does Western literature abound with figures who experience a crucial moment of uncertainty in their actions? In this highly original and engaging work, he explores the significance of these unlikely heroes for literature and history.
From Aeneas—who wavered momentarily before plunging his sword into Turnus's chest—to Hamlet, Orestes, Parzival, Wallenstein, and others, including Kafka's Josef K., Ziolkowski demonstrates that characters' private uncertainty reveals a classic opposition of binary forces. He describes how Aeneas, for example, was forced to choose between the ancient code of blood vengeance and the new civic virtues of law and justice. Ziolkowski asserts that the indecision of the characters reflects the tensions that authors observed in their own societies. Drawing on the insights of Hegel and Freud, he analyzes the ways in which these tensions represent turning points in cultural history.
In stark contrast to Aeneas, Josef K. temporized for a year before his executioners thrust a knife into his heart. For Ziolkowski, the centuries separating Virgil and Kafka are ones in which the notion of the hero was transformed almost to the point of total inversion. He sheds light on this transformation and a corresponding change in literary form.
Ziolkowski suspects that the moment of indecision represents a crisis when an entire society is poised for change—not a crisis for the fictional hero's society but for his author's.
-- Mark Jarman * The Hudson Revi- Winner of A 2005 New Jersey Council for the Humanities' Hono.
ISBN: 9780801442032
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 21mm
Weight: 454g
184 pages