Phenomenological Reviews

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178572

The privileged moment

a study in the rhetoric of Thomas Wolfe

Maurice Natanson

pp. 131-140

Abstract

The rhetoric of Thomas Wolfe is part of his legend.' Building a fury of signs, he elevated words and sounds to an intensity which is qualitatively their own and unique to his style; protean and boundless, he urged language into a wildness and power that signalized his transcendent view of the world as a labyrinth of the lonely and the alone. Wolfe's style, then, is as striking as his great figure must have been; and there is no critic of his work who has failed to remark its reach and also its problematics.2 But as with so many other features of the Wolfe legend, there has been more mention of his rhetoric than there has been serious analysis of it.3 Somehow it has been taken for granted for the very reason of its immediacy. That much has been lost in this way I hope to show; but the present essay cannot claim to be a study of Wolfe's style or an anatomy of his language. Rather, I am here concerned with his rhetoric as a single, though crucial, facet of a phenomenology of language, a facet which will, however, lead to nuclear issues in rhetorical theory.

Publication details

Published in:

Natanson Maurice (1962) Literature, philosophy, and the social sciences: essays in existentialism and phenomenology. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 131-140

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-011-9278-1_11

Full citation:

Natanson Maurice (1962) The privileged moment: a study in the rhetoric of Thomas Wolfe, In: Literature, philosophy, and the social sciences, Dordrecht, Springer, 131–140.