Review the chapter - distance and emotion


Problem:

In "Distance and Emotion," chapter 11 of her book, The Classic Short Story, 1870-1925: Theory of a Genre, Florence Goyet observes that In Mikhail Bakhtin's terms, a text is monologic and diametrically opposed to the polyphonic novel when it lets us hear one truth only, privileging one voice over all others. In order to create polyphony, as defined by Bakhtin, the different voices involved must be "a plurality of consciousnesses, with equal rights" - each of them must have their own validity. [...]There are very few classic short stories that expose us to several "voices". In contrast to monologic classic short stories, Modernist stories are often polyphonic and expose the reader to two or more 'voices.' With reference to TWO stories from Fitzgerald's "The Ice Palace," Woolf's "Kew Gardens" or Tagore's "The Child's Return," identify what different 'voices' these stories articulate. Analyze how these voices are presented and in what ways the presence of different 'voices' affects our reading of the story. Remember to substantiate your argument with quotations from the short stories.

 

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