Mad Pursuits: Therapeutic Narration in Postwar American Fiction examines three mid-century American novels—J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye (1951), Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man (1952), and Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar (1963)—in relation to the rise and popularization of psychoanalytic theory in America. The study historicizes these landmark novels as representing and interrogating postwar America’s confidence in the therapeutic capacity of narrative to redress psychological problems. Drawing on key concepts from narrative theory and the multidisciplinary field of narrative and identity studies, I argue that these texts develop a multi-layered, formal problematization of therapeutic narration: the narrativization of the self through mo...
“American Impotence” investigates a continuity between literary representations of masculinity and c...
This study aims to discover the triangulation of madness, power and resistance in selected post-wa...
My aim in this thesis is to investigate various versions of escapism in a well known novel of Americ...
abstract: "The Problem of Hope: Literary Tragedy in Mid-Twentieth Century American Fiction" examines...
Drawing on ideas from the increasingly influential field of embodied cognition (including work from ...
The Games Men Play examines the relationship between madness and the social construction of masculi...
The Games Men Play examines the relationship between madness and the social construction of masculi...
This dissertation considers how American fiction from the years of 1947-1967 that engages with psych...
This is one of the first books to comprehensively explore representations of madness in postwar Brit...
J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye (1951) and Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar (1963), both serve as ...
This is a rhetorical analysis of three popular autobiographical acts about depression from the Ameri...
The history of the unreliable narrator in fiction, characterizing narratives shaped by personal bias...
The history of the unreliable narrator in fiction, characterizing narratives shaped by personal bias...
The history of the unreliable narrator in fiction, characterizing narratives shaped by personal bias...
“American Impotence” investigates a continuity between literary representations of masculinity and c...
“American Impotence” investigates a continuity between literary representations of masculinity and c...
This study aims to discover the triangulation of madness, power and resistance in selected post-wa...
My aim in this thesis is to investigate various versions of escapism in a well known novel of Americ...
abstract: "The Problem of Hope: Literary Tragedy in Mid-Twentieth Century American Fiction" examines...
Drawing on ideas from the increasingly influential field of embodied cognition (including work from ...
The Games Men Play examines the relationship between madness and the social construction of masculi...
The Games Men Play examines the relationship between madness and the social construction of masculi...
This dissertation considers how American fiction from the years of 1947-1967 that engages with psych...
This is one of the first books to comprehensively explore representations of madness in postwar Brit...
J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye (1951) and Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar (1963), both serve as ...
This is a rhetorical analysis of three popular autobiographical acts about depression from the Ameri...
The history of the unreliable narrator in fiction, characterizing narratives shaped by personal bias...
The history of the unreliable narrator in fiction, characterizing narratives shaped by personal bias...
The history of the unreliable narrator in fiction, characterizing narratives shaped by personal bias...
“American Impotence” investigates a continuity between literary representations of masculinity and c...
“American Impotence” investigates a continuity between literary representations of masculinity and c...
This study aims to discover the triangulation of madness, power and resistance in selected post-wa...
My aim in this thesis is to investigate various versions of escapism in a well known novel of Americ...