The Fantastic in Literature
About this book
What exactly is the fantastic? In the twentieth-century world, our notions of what is impossible are assaulted every day. To define the nature of fantasy and the fantastic, Eric S. Rabkin considers its role in fairy tales, science fiction, detective stories, and religious allegory, as well as in traditional literature.
The examples he studies range from Grimm's fairy tales to Agatha Christie, from Childhood's End to the novels of Henry James, from Voltaire to Robbe-Grillet to A Canticle for Leiboivitz. By analyzing different works of literature, the author shows that the fantastic depends on a reversal of the ground rules of a narrative world. This reversal signals most commonly a psychological escape, often from boredom, to an unknown world secretly yearned for, whose order, although reversed, bears a precise relation to reality.
Originally published in 1976.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- Preface
- Bibliographic Note
- I The Fantastic and Fantasy
- II The Fantastic and Escape
- III The Fantastic and Perspective
- IV The Fantastic and Genre Criticism
- V The Fantastic and Literary History
- VI The Scope of the Fantastic
- Index
