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In Fiction
Refracts Science, Allen Thiher demonstrates that major modernists,
in their concern with the sciences, were strongly influenced by them. He
argues that there are direct relations between science and the formal
shape of fiction developed by some of the most important modernists.
Especially relevant for his arguments are modern cosmology and quantum
mechanics, as well as examples from mathematics, biology, and medicine.
Thiher begins his study by examining
the inevitable question about the two cultures—scientific and
humanistic—that is often invoked in discussions of their relationship.
He outlines the essential context for understanding how science was
perceived by modernist novelists. This background included Pascalian and
Newtonian cosmology, Darwinism, and the questions of epistemology
ushered in by relativity theory and quantum mechanics. He then devotes a
chapter each to Musil, Proust, Kafka, and Joyce in which he focuses on
epistemology and on ideas about law in science and literature.
Thiher goes on to describe the
subsequent development of modernist fiction. He proposes that, after
Joyce, thought experiments dominated the relations between science and
later modernist fiction, as exemplified by Woolf, Faulkner, and Borges.
In conclusion Thiher addresses the ongoing development of these
experiments in postmodern fiction and discusses the fortunes of
positivism in postmodern fiction.
Written in a clear and accessible
style, Fiction Refracts Science will be of interest to
specialists in literary modernism, science studies, and the history of
science, as well as to scientists themselves.
About the Author
Allen Thiher is Curators’ Professor of
Romance Languages and Literature at the University of Missouri–Columbia.
He is the author of numerous books, most recently Fiction Rivals
Science: The French Novel from Balzac to Proust (University of
Missouri Press).
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