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- Title
Losing Nothing, Comprehending Everything.
- Authors
Williams, Deborah Lindsay; Peterman, Michael A.; Thacker, Robert
- Abstract
The article presents a contextual analysis of book "Death Comes for the Archbishop," by Willa Cather. According to the author, the book was written on the basis that everything does not have to be interpreted into written language in order to be understood. The images of the Angelus bell and the mesa in southwestern New Mexico are discussed. An interpretation of the novel indirectly offered by Cather, a description of the landscape of the novel made by Cather, and examples of how the novel attempts to layer Old and New World are presented.
- Subjects
NEW Mexico; DEATH Comes for the Archbishop (Book : Cather); CATHER, Willa, 1873-1947; WRITTEN communication; INTERPRETATION (Philosophy); BELLS in literature; LANDSCAPES in literature; MESAS; MEANING (Philosophy) in literature; LITERARY criticism
- Publication
Cather Studies, 2000, Vol 4, Issue 1, p80
- ISBN
9780803263987
- ISSN
1045-9871
- Publication type
Literary Criticism