An edition of The Hidden Greatness in The Dwarf (2013)

The Hidden Greatness in The Dwarf

The Hidden Greatness in The Dwarf
Inger Biersdchenk
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Last edited by Bernhard Bierschenk
May 7, 2013 | History
An edition of The Hidden Greatness in The Dwarf (2013)

The Hidden Greatness in The Dwarf

This study concerns The Dwarf (Dvärgen) by Pär Lagerkvist. The author wanted to give his tribute to the Renaissance masters by letting the dwarf express his scorn and contempt for humanism. Further, Lagerkvist wanted to characterize the greatness and lowness of Man through the prince and his innate dwarf. It is a general conception that the prince character in this novel has retrieved properties from Machiavelli’s Prince. Thus, the research question is whether Lagerkvist, accordingly, through the evil dwarf’s admiration for the prince expresses his contempt for the Machiavellian prince model or whether the doubleness that sometimes emerges in the dwarf’s narrative in fact means the opposite standpoint. By analysing a student’s essay on The Dwarf with PTA/Vertex and comparing the resulting holophors with a sentence from Machiavelli, used in a previous study, it could be shown that the student without knowing it had picked up from Lagerkvist’s tale the dualistic mental structure of Machiavelli, synthesized in the terms of Heresy in the Orientation dimension and Move in the Intention dimension. The conclusion is that Lagerkvist’s prince character represents such dualistic properties that refer to a utilitarian outlook.

Publish Date
Pages
12

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Edition Availability
Cover of: The Hidden Greatness in The Dwarf
The Hidden Greatness in The Dwarf
2013, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, Lund University, Sweden
Paper

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Some Preconditions
On the duality in Dvärgen
Machiavelli and Dvärgen
In a Young Viewer’s Eye
The Essence of the Text
Orientation
Intention
Reflections
References

Edition Notes

Published in
Lund, Sweden

The Physical Object

Format
Paper
Pagination
12p
Number of pages
12
Dimensions
30 x 21 x 0.2 centimeters
Weight
86 grams

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL25426481M

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May 7, 2013 Created by Bernhard Bierschenk Added new book.