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Ambiguity in literature: recovering the life of reading

This thesis contends that ambiguity in meaning performs an essential role in the reader’s response to literature. Ambiguity is not simply an incidental or marginal feature of literary texts but relates in basic ways to the reader’s experience of literature. It is the still point around which a liter...

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Main Author: Bowditch, Eden Unger
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2013
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access_status_str Open Access
author Bowditch, Eden Unger
author_browse Bowditch, Eden Unger
author_facet Bowditch, Eden Unger
author_sort Bowditch, Eden Unger
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv The author retains all rights with regard to copyright. The author certifies that written permission from the owner(s) of third-party copyrighted matter included in the thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study has been obtained. The author further certifies that IRB approval has been obtained for this thesis, or that IRB approval is not necessary for this thesis. Insofar as this thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study is an educational record as defined in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) (20 USC 1232g), the author has granted consent to disclosure of it to anyone who requests a copy.
description This thesis contends that ambiguity in meaning performs an essential role in the reader’s response to literature. Ambiguity is not simply an incidental or marginal feature of literary texts but relates in basic ways to the reader’s experience of literature. It is the still point around which a literary text revolves. In examining the function of ambiguity in literary texts, I will show how ambiguity both defines a text as literary and allows it to live and grow through time. The notion of a text is meaningless apart from the reading of it, and, ambiguity, in the unchanging presence of the words, allows for the meaning of the text to evolve with every reading of it. Discussions of Aristotle, Saint Augustine, and Wolfgang Iser bring together the historical and modern understanding of literary texts. Through the examples of Sophocles’s drama, Oedipus the King, T. S. Eliot’s poem, Burnt Norton in Four Quartets and Henry James’s short novella, The Turn of the Screw, I demonstrate how the reading of a text allows literature to become an evolving experience into which the reader breathes life, so that literature can unfold as an unending history of meanings.
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id oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-1918
institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:44.926Z
license_str Other — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
publishDate 2013
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-1918 Ambiguity in literature: recovering the life of reading Bowditch, Eden Unger This thesis contends that ambiguity in meaning performs an essential role in the reader’s response to literature. Ambiguity is not simply an incidental or marginal feature of literary texts but relates in basic ways to the reader’s experience of literature. It is the still point around which a literary text revolves. In examining the function of ambiguity in literary texts, I will show how ambiguity both defines a text as literary and allows it to live and grow through time. The notion of a text is meaningless apart from the reading of it, and, ambiguity, in the unchanging presence of the words, allows for the meaning of the text to evolve with every reading of it. Discussions of Aristotle, Saint Augustine, and Wolfgang Iser bring together the historical and modern understanding of literary texts. Through the examples of Sophocles’s drama, Oedipus the King, T. S. Eliot’s poem, Burnt Norton in Four Quartets and Henry James’s short novella, The Turn of the Screw, I demonstrate how the reading of a text allows literature to become an evolving experience into which the reader breathes life, so that literature can unfold as an unending history of meanings. 2013-06-01T07:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/919 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/1918/viewcontent/Eden_completefinalPDF.doc_20.pdf The author retains all rights with regard to copyright. The author certifies that written permission from the owner(s) of third-party copyrighted matter included in the thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study has been obtained. The author further certifies that IRB approval has been obtained for this thesis, or that IRB approval is not necessary for this thesis. Insofar as this thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study is an educational record as defined in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) (20 USC 1232g), the author has granted consent to disclosure of it to anyone who requests a copy. Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Ambiguity in literature
spellingShingle Ambiguity in literature
Bowditch, Eden Unger
Ambiguity in literature: recovering the life of reading
title Ambiguity in literature: recovering the life of reading
title_full Ambiguity in literature: recovering the life of reading
title_fullStr Ambiguity in literature: recovering the life of reading
title_full_unstemmed Ambiguity in literature: recovering the life of reading
title_short Ambiguity in literature: recovering the life of reading
title_sort ambiguity in literature recovering the life of reading
topic Ambiguity in literature
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/919
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/1918/viewcontent/Eden_completefinalPDF.doc_20.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT bowditchedenunger ambiguityinliteraturerecoveringthelifeofreading