Journal Title
Title of Journal: Neophilologus
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Abbravation: Neophilologus
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Publisher
Springer Netherlands
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Authors: Johanna M Wagner Marysa Demoor
Publish Date: 2012/07/20
Volume: 97, Issue: 2, Pages: 417-435
Abstract
Ethan Frome has been criticized for its narratological construction which is as challenging now as ever The challenge arises through the employment of one narrator to relate both the main story and the frame story which takes place 24 years prior But this narrator is an outsider to Starkfield and his story relies on tightlipped remarks provided by the local townsfolk Consequently the tale culminates in a vision constructed by the entanglement of the narrator’s own imagination and a few sparse threads of hearsay It is no wonder the construction of the novel then has been a subject of such passionate critique This essay analyzes the narrator’s deepseated fear of and attraction for his beloved Ethan which motivates a specific interpretation of his life Through a Butlerian lens we will argue that the narrator acts as the controlling voice indeed the voice of the law intent on interpellating Ethan as an heroic subject The performative nature of interpellation however leads to contradiction as details about Ethan and Ethan’s own behaviors framed meticulously by the narrator collide with the narrator’s overall vision These contradictions activate a chain reaction in the narrative that unwittingly depletes Ethan’s power and masculinity as the wouldbe hero and strengthens Zeena’s power and masculinity as the wouldbe villain The narrator’s story ends in a fabricated picture framed to defend a manufactured hero told by a naïve outsider who is at once too invested and removed from the protagonist to comprehend the nuances of smalltown life
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