Description
About the Author
Vaclav Paris is an Assistant Professor at the City College of New York, where he teaches courses on Literary Theory, Comparative Literature, James Joyce's Ulysses, and Global Modernism. His research focuses on the intersections between science and modernist literature around the world. Dr Paris's work has appeared in Comparative Literature Studies, the Journal of Modern Literature, Modernism/modernity, the James Joyce Quarterly, the Arizona Quarterly, and English Literature in Transition. Dr Paris is also a passionate student of languages and a translator. His translation of Zdenek Kratochvil's The Philosophy of Living Nature, was published by Karolinum in November 2016.
Reviews
This study demonstrates how a disparate selection of authors deals with similar problems in similar ways. It tells us something important about how modernism is plural and not just a singular phenomenon and adds to and extends our understanding of the richness of the literature of the twentieth century. * Derek Hand, James Joyce Quarterly *
Vaclav Paris's critical study brings together what appears to be a collection of unlikely literary bedfellows. Each text, in its way, is unorthodox or marginal, certainly experimental in form and theme. * Derek Hand, James Joyce Quarterly *
In The Evolutions of Modernist Epic, Paris proved to be a true comparatist by bypassing all the artificial limitations and boundaries of various genres, concepts, and ideologies such as Darwinism, epic and world literature in order to analyze personal and unique "evolutions" of individuals represented in selected modernist works. By combining science with literature, he offers an unbiased reading to better understand the human nature. * Buke Saglam, PhD fellow and researcher, Slavica Litteraria *
There is a glee in reading something that opens possible ways forward, rather than suggesting one definitive path. * Journal of Modern Literature *
Book Information
ISBN 9780198868217
Author Vaclav Paris
Format Hardback
Page Count 240
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 400g
Dimensions(mm) 222mm * 140mm * 19mm