Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Kroetsch, Robert (Vol. 132) - John Clement Ball (essay date Fall 1989)


Kroetsch, Robert (Vol. 132) - John Clement Ball (essay date Fall 1989)

John Clement Ball (essay date Fall 1989)

SOURCE: “The Carnival of Babel: The Construction of Voice in Robert Kroetsch’s ‘Out West’ Triptych,” in Essays on Canadian Writing, No. 39, Fall, 1989, pp. 1-22.

[In the following essay, Ball examines the place and meaning of silence and voice in Kroetsch’s ‘Out West’ series of novels.]

From one so concerned with the multiplicitous nature of voice and the elusiveness of meaning, Robert Kroetsch’s work has displayed a remarkable cohesiveness. As a writer whose many voices include those of poet, novelist, postmodern theorist, and intensely nationalistic critic of Canadian literature, he is also his own best explicator. A Kroetsch essay about an Atwood or Ross novel works equally well as commentary about the author’s own fiction, because of the way ideas echo back and forth. Likewise, his fiction can help unravel his often puzzling theoretical statements.

Kroetsch began his...

[The entire page is 9074 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: