Why, during the last two hundred years, when critical achievement in the
field of tragedy has been outstanding, has there been little creative
practice? David Lenson examines the work of various writers not
ordinarily placed in the tragic tradition--among them, Kleist, Goethe,
Melville, Yeats, and Faulkner--and suggests that the tradition of
tragedy does continue in genres other than drama, that is, in the novel
and even in lyric poetry.
The notion of tragedy's migration from one genre to others indicates,
however, rather sweeping modifications in the theory of tragedy.
Achilles' Choice proposes a structural model for tragic criticism that
synthesizes the almost scientific theories predominant since World War
II with the irrationalist theories they replaced.
Originally published in 1975.
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