Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Life, Unity, and Suffering: The Moral of Cormac McCarthy'sSuttree
View through CrossRef
AbstractForty years after publication, Suttree remains McCarthy's most enigmatic novel. The one consistent element of what is by now an expansive body of scholarship is an agreement regarding the centrality of the title character. Yet while critics agree Suttree is the key to Suttree, there exists little agreement about the larger message of the novel. Against this confusion, we argue that it is a quest to reconcile his sense of self and understanding of life that drives Suttree's actions throughout the novel, this quest illuminating not only McCarthy's well-documented critique of Western culture but, more importantly, his own alternative conception of life, this alternative an egalitarian vision of society that brings to light the novel's ethical imperative.
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Title: Life, Unity, and Suffering: The Moral of Cormac McCarthy'sSuttree
Description:
AbstractForty years after publication, Suttree remains McCarthy's most enigmatic novel.
The one consistent element of what is by now an expansive body of scholarship is an agreement regarding the centrality of the title character.
Yet while critics agree Suttree is the key to Suttree, there exists little agreement about the larger message of the novel.
Against this confusion, we argue that it is a quest to reconcile his sense of self and understanding of life that drives Suttree's actions throughout the novel, this quest illuminating not only McCarthy's well-documented critique of Western culture but, more importantly, his own alternative conception of life, this alternative an egalitarian vision of society that brings to light the novel's ethical imperative.
Related Results
Disgust in the Early Works of Cormac McCarthy
Disgust in the Early Works of Cormac McCarthy
Although critics quickly recognized that Cormac McCarthy was a writer who dealt with grotesque and violent material in an uncommonly forthright manner, many saw this aspect of his ...
Distant suffering : on mediated suffering and health care
Distant suffering : on mediated suffering and health care
<p dir="ltr">This thesis examines distant suffering, or when suffering of others who are far away is mediated or conveyed. Distant suffering often refers to when popular medi...
Distant suffering : on mediated suffering and health care
Distant suffering : on mediated suffering and health care
<p dir="ltr">This thesis examines distant suffering, or when suffering of others who are far away is mediated or conveyed. Distant suffering often refers to when popular medi...
Cormac McCarthy and Leslie Garrett: A Literary Friendship
Cormac McCarthy and Leslie Garrett: A Literary Friendship
Drawing on print and film interviews with novelist Leslie Garrett by Knoxville journalist Don Williams, this article examines McCarthy’s friendship with Garrett from the perspectiv...
Escaping the Shadow
Escaping the Shadow
Photo by Karl Raymund Catabas on Unsplash
The interests of patients at most levels of policymaking are represented by a disconnected patchwork of groups … “After Buddha was dead, ...
The Cormac Room
The Cormac Room
ABSTRACT
This is not literary article about Cormac McCarthy but an article about Cormac the architect, builder, and stonemason. For three months Cormac was involv...
A Critique of Principlism
A Critique of Principlism
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash
INTRODUCTION
Bioethics does not have an explicitly stated and agreed upon means of resolving conflicts between normative theories. As such, b...
Cormac McCarthy's Poetics of Craftsmanship
Cormac McCarthy's Poetics of Craftsmanship
ABSTRACT
“The work is everything,” says Ben, the main character of McCarthy's play The Stonemason, summing up his grandfather Papaw's view of the craft of the stonem...

