Remembering Purgatory: Contemporary Incarnations in Paris, London, and Dublin
My main contention throughout the dissertation is that each city has a chronic fault that it is trying to excise. It is only when it accepts that fault that it is purgatorial. With Paris, I observe that French Republicanism exiles mystery and the hidden. However, when the hidden becomes sayable the city becomes purgatorial. I examine the early effects of the Revolution in Parisian literature, turn to Balzac, Hugo, and Zola, and then end with contemporary works by Andrei Makine, Michel Tournier, and Alix Girod de l'Ain. Next, I demonstrate that London attempts to excise the plagues it creates internally and abroad. Yet, in its acceptance of the disease of the other, it is a purgatorial city. I trace this motif first in Defoe and Blake and later in Dickens and Conrad. I finish with Zadie Smith, Gautam Malkani, and Ian McEwan. Lastly, I maintain that Dublin's difficulty comes in recognizing its parentage, be it England or the Church. The city's acknowledgment of its antecedents can lead it to a more purgatorial vision of itself. I follow Joyce's treatment of religion and paternity, move on to mid-20th century accounts of the city with Flann O'Brien and Donleavy, and end with novels by Keith Ridgway and Barry McCrea.
While my dissertation focuses on Western cities with Christian underpinnings, I ultimately posit that even in a secular or non-Christian world, the idea of the purgatorial, of a restorative union to a more complete version of the city, exists in all cities.
History
Date Modified
2017-06-02Defense Date
2010-03-29Research Director(s)
Margaret DoodyCommittee Members
Collin Meissner Catherine PerryDegree
- Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Level
- Doctoral Dissertation
Language
- English
Alternate Identifier
etd-04152010-131337Publisher
University of Notre DameAdditional Groups
- Literature
Program Name
- Literature