No More Heroes

No More Heroes - Cover

Narrative Perspective and Morality in Cormac McCarthy

by Lydia R. Cooper

Southern Literary Studies

200 pages / 5.50 x 8.50 inches / no illustrations

ebook available

Literary Criticism / American

Hardcover / 9780807137215 / May 2011

Critics often trace the prevailing mood of despair and purported nihilism in the works of Cormac McCarthy to the striking absence of interior thought in his seemingly amoral characters. In No More Heroes, however, Lydia Cooper reveals that though McCarthy limits inner revelations, he never eliminates them entirely. In certain crucial cases, he endows his characters with ethical decisions and attitudes, revealing a strain of heroism exists in his otherwise violent and apocalyptic world.

Cooper evaluates all of McCarthy's work to date, carefully exploring the range of his narrative techniques. The writer's overwhelmingly distant, omniscient third-person narrative rarely shifts to a more limited voice. When it does deviate, however, revelations of his characters' consciousness unmistakably exhibit moral awareness and ethical behavior. The quiet, internal struggles of moral men such as John Grady Cole in the Border Trilogy and the father in The Road demonstrate an imperfect but very human heroism.

Even when the writing moves into the minds of immoral characters, McCarthy draws attention to the characters' humanity, forcing the perceptive reader to identify with even the most despicable representatives of the human race. Cooper shows that this rare yet powerful recognition of commonality and the internal yearnings for community and a commitment to justice or compassion undeniably exist in McCarthy's work.

No More Heroes directly addresses the essential question about McCarthy's brutal and morally ambiguous universe and reveals poignant new answers.

Lydia R. Cooper is a visiting assistant professor of English at Monmouth College.

Reviews of No More Heroes

“This trenchant study by Lydia Cooper offers a useful lens through which to consider the complex ethics of Cormac McCarthy’s often dark and troubling fiction. . . . An important contribution to the ever-burgeoning body of McCarthy scholarship.”—Western American Literature

“A well-written and well-organized trek through McCarthy’s works....Cooper’s idea of heroism within the novels is unique and will undoubtedly provide critics and readers much to consider.”—Studies in the Novel

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