This article seeks to demonstrate how Janet Frame’s late fiction can be read as a theoretical engagement with the conceptual investigations of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, especially the notions of minor literature and the in her late novels Living in the Maniototo (1981) and The Carpathians (1989). For this reason, my approach must be sharply distinguished from a more commonplace analogical framing of Frame or a simple one-to-one translation of her fiction into alternative terms. By weaving theory through her fiction, Frame makes a significant contribution to literature that responds to the still-emerging field of Deleuzean literary critical theory
This thesis examines the notions of time and epoch through the works of three contemporary French au...
An introduction to a special focus in the Journal of Postcolonial Writing of three articles on the w...
The article argues that the discipline of Comparative Literature has much to offer when rethinking h...
The article reviews and analysis the novel 'The Edge of the Alphabet' by New Zealand author, Janet F...
Art and the initiation of the artist into the skills of her craft, along with the fiction making hab...
This article explores Frame’s ‘undecidability’, the modus operandi which collapses conventional bina...
Janet Frame's 1979 novel Living in the Maniototo features a ubiquitous narrator whose multiple perso...
International audienceThis essay proposes to analyse the way Janet Frame defamiliarises the conventi...
This essay offers a close reading of Mona Minim and the Smell of the Sun, a tale for children often ...
This paper argues that Janet Frame’s 1988 novel, The Carpathians, can be read as a series of m...
Janet Frame’s novels Intensive Care (1970/1987), Daughter Buffalo (1972), and Living in the Maniotot...
Over the years the work of Janet Frame has been subjected to appraisal and appropriation by critics ...
Throughout his work, Deleuze not only draws on literature in order to address philosophical problems...
Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2005Janet Frame's ultimate novel, The Carpathians, joi...
This thesis examines conceptions of time and history in five American novels published between 1995 ...
This thesis examines the notions of time and epoch through the works of three contemporary French au...
An introduction to a special focus in the Journal of Postcolonial Writing of three articles on the w...
The article argues that the discipline of Comparative Literature has much to offer when rethinking h...
The article reviews and analysis the novel 'The Edge of the Alphabet' by New Zealand author, Janet F...
Art and the initiation of the artist into the skills of her craft, along with the fiction making hab...
This article explores Frame’s ‘undecidability’, the modus operandi which collapses conventional bina...
Janet Frame's 1979 novel Living in the Maniototo features a ubiquitous narrator whose multiple perso...
International audienceThis essay proposes to analyse the way Janet Frame defamiliarises the conventi...
This essay offers a close reading of Mona Minim and the Smell of the Sun, a tale for children often ...
This paper argues that Janet Frame’s 1988 novel, The Carpathians, can be read as a series of m...
Janet Frame’s novels Intensive Care (1970/1987), Daughter Buffalo (1972), and Living in the Maniotot...
Over the years the work of Janet Frame has been subjected to appraisal and appropriation by critics ...
Throughout his work, Deleuze not only draws on literature in order to address philosophical problems...
Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2005Janet Frame's ultimate novel, The Carpathians, joi...
This thesis examines conceptions of time and history in five American novels published between 1995 ...
This thesis examines the notions of time and epoch through the works of three contemporary French au...
An introduction to a special focus in the Journal of Postcolonial Writing of three articles on the w...
The article argues that the discipline of Comparative Literature has much to offer when rethinking h...