Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/664
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dc.contributor.authorHarris, Sen
dc.date.accessioned2008-07-29T14:22:00Z-
dc.date.issued2001-
dc.identifier.citationAustralasian Journal of American Studies, 20(2), p. 47-62en
dc.identifier.issn1838-9554en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/664-
dc.description.abstractContemplating his imminent departure from Poland, with its long and compromising 'genealogies of concern and obligation', this central character in Susan Sontag's recent historical novel gives expression to the now-hackneyed dream of the New World. Looking westward, he conveys a longing for the promise of imaginative self-renewal -- in effect at once a yearning for regenerative innocence and a fantasy of romanticised self-perfection -- a promise that coincides with the idea of America as a place of 'newness, emptiness, pastlessness' where the individual can turn 'life into pure future.'<sup>1</sup> That Ryszard communicates his feelings in the ambiguous form of a rhetorical question (put to himself in the third person) is worth noting for, in what is also a now-familiar story, what he and his fellow emigres inevitably discover is that the idea of self-renewal is, in practical terms, a far more difficult proposition. Sontag's novel is more complex than this suggests, and is noteworthy for what appears to be her revaluation of the symbolic significance of 'America' -- the 'old' New World that Sontag portrays in contrast to the contemporary United States.<sup>2</sup> In restating what arguably remains the central American idea -- that of the potential for untrammelled self-transformation -- within the form of an historical novel that looks back to an 'America' of the past, Sontag's text serves as a fitting introduction to E. L. Doctorow's historical novel 'Ragtime', a novel which offers a more explicit critique of this very same idea.<sup>3</sup>en
dc.languageenen
dc.publisherAustralian and New Zealand American Studies Association (ANZASA)en
dc.relation.ispartofAustralasian Journal of American Studiesen
dc.titleMyths of Individualism in E.L. Doctorow's 'Ragtime'en
dc.typeJournal Articleen
dc.subject.keywordsNorth American Literatureen
local.contributor.firstnameSen
local.subject.for2008200506 North American Literatureen
local.subject.seo751001 Languages and literatureen
local.profile.schoolSchool of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciencesen
local.profile.emailsharris9@une.edu.auen
local.output.categoryC1en
local.record.placeauen
local.record.institutionUniversity of New Englanden
local.identifier.epublicationsrecordpes:3487en
local.publisher.placeAustraliaen
local.format.startpage47en
local.format.endpage62en
local.peerreviewedYesen
local.identifier.volume20en
local.identifier.issue2en
local.contributor.lastnameHarrisen
dc.identifier.staffune-id:sharris9en
local.profile.roleauthoren
local.identifier.unepublicationidune:675en
dc.identifier.academiclevelAcademicen
local.title.maintitleMyths of Individualism in E.L. Doctorow's 'Ragtime'en
local.output.categorydescriptionC1 Refereed Article in a Scholarly Journalen
local.relation.urlhttp://www.anzasa.arts.usyd.edu.au/a.j.a.s/docs/index.htmen
local.search.authorHarris, Sen
local.uneassociationUnknownen
local.year.published2001en
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