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Time, Digression and the Other (Side) in Juan Jose Saer's La grande

Lloyd Davies

Modern Language Review, Volume: 115, Issue: 4, Pages: 852 - 871

Swansea University Author: Lloyd Davies

Abstract

This essay focuses on the final novel, La grande (2005), of the Argentine writer, Juan José Saer (1937-2005) and focuses on his treatment of time in the light of the pressures posed by his impending death. It also analyses Saer’s disparagement of reason in a world governed by the pervasive influence...

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Published in: Modern Language Review
ISSN: 0026-7937 2222-4319
Published: United Kingdom 2020
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa54668
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Abstract: This essay focuses on the final novel, La grande (2005), of the Argentine writer, Juan José Saer (1937-2005) and focuses on his treatment of time in the light of the pressures posed by his impending death. It also analyses Saer’s disparagement of reason in a world governed by the pervasive influence of incoherence and discontinuity and his portraits of disability (both literal and metaphorical). Saer subordinates the intellect to the senses and literary rigour to freewheeling digressiveness. The conclusion considers the significance of the ‘lugar más grande’ that overshadows the ‘real’ world and ‘real’ time.
College: Professional Services
Issue: 4
Start Page: 852
End Page: 871