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Full Description
This book discusses silence as a state born either by trauma-inflicted muteness or deliberate abstinence from speech focusing on the mute(d) characters, the nonverbal forms of communication and textual ellipses in Jerzy Kosinski's «The Painted Bird» and Ken Kesey's «One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest». Using a methodological approach based on the close reading of the novels, the work proposes that Kosinski and Kesey disrupt the conventional equation of power with speech and present silence as a valiant mode of resistance too. It also explores how the trope of muteness functions as an implicit strategy for the investigation of language itself, its power to create meaning, to control and eventually— silence.
Contents
Silence and speech/trauma/disability - Silence as a symptom of the «Différend» and the language of «Homo Sacer» - The silence of the victim and the speech of the victimizer in Kosinski's «The Painted Bird» - Speech, sound and silence in Kesey's «One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest» - Textual ellipses



