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Michael Lucey, What Proust Heard. Novels and the Ethnography of Talk

Michael Lucey, What Proust Heard. Novels and the Ethnography of Talk

Publié le par Vincent Ferré

What happens when we talk? This deceptively simple question is central to Marcel Proust’s monumental novel In Search of Lost Time. Both Proust’s narrator and the novel that houses him devote considerable energy to investigating not just what people are saying or doing when they talk, but also what happens socioculturally through their use of language. Proust, in other words, is interested in what linguistic anthropologists call language-in-use.

Michael Lucey elucidates Proust’s approach to language-in-use in a number of ways: principally in relation to linguistic anthropology, but also in relation to speech act theory, and to Pierre Bourdieu’s sociology. The book also includes an interlude after each of its chapters that contextualizes Proust’s social-scientific practice of novel writing in relation to that of a number of other novelists, earlier and later, and from several different traditions, including Honoré de Balzac, George Eliot, Virginia Woolf, Nathalie Sarraute, and Rachel Cusk. Lucey is thus able to show how, in the hands of quite different novelists, various aspects of the novel form become instruments of linguistic anthropological analysis. The result introduces a different way of understanding language to literary and cultural critics and explores the consequences of this new understanding for the practice of literary criticism more generally. 

Contents

On Citations
Introduction
1 Proust the Linguistic Anthropologist
Interlude: Talk in Balzac and Eliot
2 Idiotic Speech (Acts?) and the Form of In Search of Lost Time
Interlude: Harmonizing Habitus in Woolf
3 Proust and Bourdieu: Distinction and Form
Interlude: Indexical Force in Sarraute and Cusk
Conclusion: Animation and Statistics
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index