L’homme au scalpel: la figure de l’anatomiste dans le roman terrifiant du XIXe siècle
Identifieur interne : 000247 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 000246; suivant : 000248L’homme au scalpel: la figure de l’anatomiste dans le roman terrifiant du XIXe siècle
Auteurs : Caroline De MulderSource :
- Neophilologus [ 0028-2677 ] ; 2008-07-01.
Abstract
Abstract: In 19th-century literature, the character of the anatomist, a new avatar of the demonic hero, embodies a negative conception of science: a figure of limitation rather than of triumph. Though this morbid scientist first appears in gothic and romantic works, his appearance in critical texts confirms what the former suggests: the anatomist carries out a meta-textual function as a metaphor for the author. Thus the question arises: which science does the anatomist’s scalpel serve and, consequently, which writing is served by the writer’s pen?
Url:
DOI: 10.1007/s11061-007-9081-9
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