The Prose and the Passion: Anthropology, Literature and the Writing of E.M. Forster

by Nigel Rapport

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What kind of a resource - ethnographic, theoretic and methodological - does literature represent to anthropology? In "The Prose and the Passion", Nigel Rapport suggests an answer by "reading" his own social research in a small English village through the writings of E.M. Forster. He zigzags between the voices of local inhabitants and the voices of fictional characters, between Forster's narrative voice and the author's own autobiographical one. Here is a polemical review of the recent "literary turn" in anthropology; and also a humanistic riposte to the reputed death of the author. Rapport describes how anthropology and literature share the same ethos. Both are self-conscious practices which derive, in Forster's own words, from "connecting prose and passion". Both demand that their individual authors make sense of their experiences in order to intuit those of others, and so to rewrite (and right) social reality. Rapport redefines the relationship between anthropology and writing and argues for a new understanding of "writing" as a universal cognitive reflection upon, and ordering of, individual experience.
  • ISBN10 071903616X
  • ISBN13 9780719036163
  • Publish Date 17 February 1994
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 22 November 1999
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Manchester University Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 256
  • Language English