Less is More": The Power Style in Raymond Carver's and Mary Robison's Selected Short Stories" | ||||
مجلة کلية الأداب - جامعة حلوان | ||||
Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 13 November 2022 | ||||
Document Type: المقالة الأصلية | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/kgef.2022.174608.1103 | ||||
![]() | ||||
Author | ||||
Sherine Mostafa El Shoura ![]() | ||||
كلية الآداب - قسم اللغة الإنجليزية-جامعة بنها | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Raymond Carver's (1938-1988) is one of the major American writers of short stories writers. Since he appeared, he has been called the greatest short story writer since Hemingway, as well as the godfather of literary minimalism. His books have been called minimalist masterpieces that explore with careful starkness and understatement of purity of emptiness. Another important modern minimalist short story writer is Mary Robison(1949). Mary Robison's reputation as a member of the new generation of American short stories writers has steadily increased in recent years. The focus of her attention is on small, apparently insignificant, events which touch, limit, and thus illuminate the lives of ordinary people. The main aim of this study is to formulate a definition of minimalism and how Raymond Carver used the style of less is more in his major short stories’ collections: Will You Please Be Quiet, Please (1976), What We Talk About When Talk About Love (1981), Cathedral (1983) and Where I'm Calling From (1988). It will also illustrate how Mary Robison is like Carver in using few details that meant a lot in her short story collections An Amateur's Guide to the Night (1983) and Believe Them (1988).This study will reveal that in order for a minimalist's work to be successful, both extreme brevity and extreme singleness of effect must be presented. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
Minimalism; Less is more; Brevity; Power Style | ||||
Statistics Article View: 102 |
||||