Of Wests, Quests and Bullwhips: George Bowering's "Caprice" Rides through the Western Genre (CROSBI ID 234100)
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Polić Jurković, Vanja
engleski
Of Wests, Quests and Bullwhips: George Bowering's "Caprice" Rides through the Western Genre
George Bowering’s novel "Caprice" (1987) generally conforms to the literary code of the western genre, although both its form and content surpass those of a typical western. This article will focus on the novel’s departures from the western, particularly its deconstruction of the grand narratives of history and the related myth of the Wild West. It will do this through the introduction of multiple alternative histories and perspectives, in the form of fragmented narratives and diverse conceptions of time and place, addressing: the differentiation between American and Canadian myths of the Wild and Mild West respectively, which reflect the distinct ideologies and histories of inception of these bordering countries ; the deconstruction of the western genre through postmodern play with western tropes, such as the concepts of cowboy, Indian, the West, guns, and violence ; and its engagement in the metatextual play with history and narrative. The aim is to show that Bowering’s "Caprice" —a parody of the western genre written on the cusp of Canadian postmodernism—functions as palimpsest of the new (Canadian) western.
western ; cowboys and Indians ; Canadian and US Wild West(s) ; metahistory ; chronotopical and chronological approach ; postmodernism ; heterotopia
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