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Hawkes, (Jr.), John (Clendennin Burne): Critical Essay by Peter Kemp

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Gabriela Mistral
About 1 pages (425 words)
John Hawkes Summary

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John Hawkes's new novel, Virginie, is a book about eroticism that seems more concerned with doubling than coupling. Taking pains to mirror earlier models—from the troubadours to Georges Bataille—it also offers matching narratives: both recounted by Virginie, a girl in her eleventh year and at the eleventh hour of her innocence….

Between the two narratives, parallels proliferate. Lines and images recur. The culmination—havoc wreaked by an avenging mother—is the same in both. And the women involved in the erotic tableaux likewise seem counterparts across the centuries. In the 1740 story, they are endowed with allegorical names, Finesse, Colère, Magie, Volupté, Bel Esprit: and delicacy, anger, magic, voluptuousness and wit are, respectively, the main qualities displayed by the five modern women.

This is a free excerpt of 119 words. There are 425 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Hawkes, (Jr.), John (Clendennin Burne): Critical Essay by Peter Kemp from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.



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