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        Love as the Solution to the Problems of Life in James Baldwin's Another Country

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        S Koelink Scriptie Literatuurwetenschap.pdf (409.8Kb)
        Publication date
        2021
        Author
        Koelink, S.C.
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        Summary
        Love is central to the writing of James Baldwin (1924-1987). However, the importance of the notion of love in his novels has long been overlooked. In this thesis, the notion of love in Baldwin’s Another Country (1962) is researched. First, the idea of love as a basis for social change is researched; both Martin Luther King, Jr. as well as bell hooks have elaborated on this topic. Baldwin, in his essay The Fire Next Time, has also emphasized the importance of love to achieve a more equal society. Using close reading, it is clear that this idea of “love as the practice of freedom” is present in Baldwin’s Another Country: the novel advocates a transcendental love where people are seen as individuals, and not as belonging to the categories where white, patriarchal, capitalist society has placed them. The characters in Another Country, however, do not reach this transcendental love and therefore the personal relationships between the characters are analyzed to understand how the novel suggests coming to a meaningful relationship with the other. The novel shows the necessity of a profound self-love to make life bearable; once this self-love is attained, a meaningful love with the other can develop. Another Country thus shows the importance of a profound love in order to face the challenges – concerning both social inequalities as well as the personal quest for meaning in one’s life – that life imposes upon the characters.
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        https://studenttheses.uu.nl/handle/20.500.12932/39815
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