A New Historicist Approach to Kazuo Ishiguro’s When We Were Orphans
Öz
New Historicism, flourishing in the 1980s as a “new” contemporary literary approach, proposes new viewpoints to the understanding of history and challenges the conventional understanding of history by pointing out the private histories. New Historicism deals with the representations of history rather than the history itself since it believes that there is not one history but multiple histories. The purpose of this article is to analyze the representation of history in Kazuo Ishiguro’s When We Were Orphans from the New Historicist viewpoint by focusing on the concepts of time, memory and narrative technique, hence to reveal how history is narrated in subjective multiple ways and how personal histories and public histories are intermingled.
Anahtar Kelimeler
Kaynakça
- Greenblatt, Stephen (2005). Renaissance Self-fashioning: From More to Shakespeare. Chicago: The University of Chicago P. Print.
- Greenblatt, Stephen (1990). Shakespearean Negotiations: The Circulation of Social Energy in Renaissance England. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Print.
- Ishiguro, Kazuo (2000). When We Were Orphans. London: Faber &Faber. Print.
- Jameson, Fredric (1993). Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism. Durham: Duke UP. Print.
- Janik, Del Ivan (1989). “History and the ‘Here and Now’: The Novels of Graham Swift.” Twentieth-Century Literature 35: 74-88. 27.08.2014. Print.
- Kazuo Ishiguro and Oe Kenzaburo (1991), ‘The Novelist in Today’s World: A Conversation’, Boundary, 18/3: p.115. Print.
- Lewis, Barry (2000). Kazuo Ishiguro: Contemporary World Writers. Manchester UP. Print.
- Mackenzie, Suzie (25 March 2000). “Between Two Worlds.” Guardian Weekend. 10 April 2015. Web.
Ayrıntılar
Birincil Dil
Türkçe
Konular
Sanat ve Edebiyat
Bölüm
Araştırma Makalesi
Yazarlar
Duygu Serdaroğlu
TOBB EKONOMİ VE TEKNOLOJİ ÜNİVERSİTESİ
Türkiye
Yayımlanma Tarihi
31 Temmuz 2017
Gönderilme Tarihi
7 Şubat 2017
Kabul Tarihi
-
Yayımlandığı Sayı
Yıl 2017 Cilt: 16 Sayı: 3