Hayden White probes the notion of authority in art and literature and examines the problems of meaning―its production, distribution, and consumption―in different historical epochs. In the end, he suggests, t...

Buy Now From Amazon

Hayden White probes the notion of authority in art and literature and examines the problems of meaning―its production, distribution, and consumption―in different historical epochs. In the end, he suggests, the only meaning that history can have is the kind that a narrative imagination gives to it. The secret of the process by which consciousness invests history with meaning resides in "the content of the form," in the way our narrative capacities transform the present into a fulfillment of a past from which we would wish to have descended.



Similar Products

The Fiction of Narrative: Essays on History, Literature, and Theory, 1957–2007Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century EuropeTropics of Discourse: Essays in Cultural CriticismMetahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century EuropeGender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (Routledge Classics) (Volume 36)OrientalismThe Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays (University of Texas Press Slavic Series)The Practice of Everyday Life