The Body in the Library: Affect, Intertextuality, and Literary History in Alice Munro's 'Wenlock Edge'
Alice Munro's densely intertextual "Wenlock Edge" offers an allegory for her engagement with literary history. In the story's uncanny central scene, a naked young woman reads A. E. Housman aloud in a private library for an elderly gentleman, evoking in her exposed condition how o...
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Published in | ELH Vol. 88; no. 4; pp. 1083 - 1109 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Baltimore
Johns Hopkins University Press
01.12.2021
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Alice Munro's densely intertextual "Wenlock Edge" offers an allegory for her engagement with literary history. In the story's uncanny central scene, a naked young woman reads A. E. Housman aloud in a private library for an elderly gentleman, evoking in her exposed condition how oral or folk or outsider culture enters the literary canon. A source for this figure, which I call the body in the library, is Munro's ancestor Margaret Hogg, who performed ballads for Sir Walter Scott; other versions of it appear in the story's intertexts (Housman, Gawain, Plato), as well as in Munro's earlier stories of cultural initiation. |
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ISSN: | 0013-8304 1080-6547 1080-6547 |
DOI: | 10.1353/elh.2021.0032 |