Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Note on the text
- 1 Memory and poetics
- 2 The fictional narrator
- 3 Memory and the system of ascending plots
- 4 The memories of the characters: forms of affirmative memory
- 5 The memories of the characters: forms of negative memory
- 6 Forgetting
- 7 Foretelling
- 8 The Christocentric poetic memory system
- 9 Afterword
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Titles in the series
8 - The Christocentric poetic memory system
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Note on the text
- 1 Memory and poetics
- 2 The fictional narrator
- 3 Memory and the system of ascending plots
- 4 The memories of the characters: forms of affirmative memory
- 5 The memories of the characters: forms of negative memory
- 6 Forgetting
- 7 Foretelling
- 8 The Christocentric poetic memory system
- 9 Afterword
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Titles in the series
Summary
And He took bread and gave thanks, and broke it, and gave unto them, saying, This is My body which is given for you: this do in remembrance of Me.
(Luke 22:19)This cup is the new covenant in My blood. Do this whenever you drink it, in remembrance of Me.
(I Corinthians 11:24)IMITATIONS OF CHRIST: VARIATIONS ON A THEME
The ideal of Christ was the final cause and aim of Dostoevsky's poetic work and aesthetic thought. When Bakhtin said that the voice and image of Christ ‘must crown the world of voices, organize and subdue it’, he added in an interesting footnote that ‘such an ideal, authoritative image which is not contemplated, but followed’ was ‘never realised’ in Dostoevsky's work, but was ‘only envisioned by Dostoevsky as the ultimate limit of his artistic projects’. Not perfectly realised, true enough. For a limit, by definition, is some ultimate point, or fixed value to which a series progressively converges but can never reach or equal in a finite number of terms. But this ideal limit was most closely approximated in The Brothers Karamazov. Every aspect of poetic memory ultimately leads to the memory of Christ. We may designate this master memory as the ‘dominant’, which Jakobson defines as ‘the focusing component of a work of art: it rules, determines and transforms the remaining components’. And given that we have to do with a dominant that is a divine ideal, it also transcends all the novel's components.
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- Information
- The Brothers Karamazov and the Poetics of Memory , pp. 273 - 318Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991