The Moviegoer

The Moviegoer is a 1961 novel by Walker Percy. It won a National Book Award in 1962. The Moviegoer recounts the story of Binx Bolling, an aliented, anxious young stockbroker, who seeks meaning for his existence by embarking upon a "quest." During a firefight in the Korean War, Binx was wounded. He said that, as he lay upon the battlefield, he saw, as if for the first time, a dung beetle. Because he actually saw this insect, it became "present" to him, he explains, more so than any other aspect of his environment, and he felt truly alive for that instant of his life. The incident marked his search for a meaningful existence in which the world, in all its fullness, is present to him and he is likewise present to it. Percy refers explicitly to the philosopher Kierkegaard during the book, and the book's themes show the strong influence of Kierkegaard's writings, particularly with regards to the theme of "repetition."

External link

Kierkegaard's Narrative: The Moviegoer Moviegoer Moviegoer

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
good conduct medal
lisa miller
trailer (vehicle)
guadalcanal, spain
live at the continental and the esplanade
voice chasing
world wide web wanderer
list of canadian parliamentary secretaries
live, may 1992
unfoldable cardinal
gzira
songs from the south paul kelly's greatest hits
cornell international law journal
nena (supercontinent)
smoke (album)
purple faced langur
girl power
huang qi
tropic of cancer (novel)
the naked and the dead
vrelo bosne
street luge
electrical breakdown
parade's end
university of north florida
ronald j. brachman
fresco pictures
death comes for the archbishop
quiet girl with a credit card
as far as a life goes
of human bondage
saint mary's college (michigan)
bloc qubcois shadow cabinet
car tape
version originale
a high wind in jamaica
natalia
tsukemono
a house for mr biswas
darrell griffith
a bend in the river
elias hicks
illawarra steelers
scoop (novel)