Contains fulltext : 191453.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)This dissertation addresses questions on the nature of reading stories, experiencing narratives and engaging with fictional worlds. It focuses on the characterization of the reader’s engaged narrative experiences of two novels by Russian-American author Vladimir Nabokov (1899-1977), Lolita (1955) and Pale Fire (1962). The main goal is to gain insight into how the language of literary fiction triggers different cognitive processes that allow readers to engage with narrative worlds and follow the mental functioning of fictional characters. This study integrates theory and method from literary studies, linguistics, computer science, communication studies, the ...
Postmodern literary fiction relies heavily on intertextual connections between works and genres. Vla...
This thesis explores the relationship between aesthetics and ethics in Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita, as...
This article aims at, if not answering, at least raising the question: What is it exactly that we re...
This dissertation addresses questions on the nature of reading stories, experiencing narratives and ...
Vladimir Nabokov’s novels seem to hold, for many, a strange fascination. This essay began as an inqu...
This study investigated the nature of the two notions, memories and time in relation to narrative in...
This dissertation defines “artifact texts” as works of fiction utilizing a narrative device in which...
This paper focuses on Nabokov's American fiction as novels of the so-called “Long 1950s” and tries t...
The analysis of the novel Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov (English and Russian versions) has revealed the...
Vladimir Nabokov's "Lolita" is known for its seductive writing despite its destructive subject matte...
This essay will explore the treatment of loss and grief in Vladimir Nabokov's novels Pale Fire and L...
The main focus of this paper is on the narrative strategy used by fan writers in the process of inte...
The present study is an attempt to use “textually oriented discourse analysis” of Norman Fairclough,...
Artifice is a major preoccupation in Nabokov's English novels. Parody of literary genres and stances...
Brian Boyd mentions that “Vladimir Nabokov learned to write fiction that was immediately accessible ...
Postmodern literary fiction relies heavily on intertextual connections between works and genres. Vla...
This thesis explores the relationship between aesthetics and ethics in Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita, as...
This article aims at, if not answering, at least raising the question: What is it exactly that we re...
This dissertation addresses questions on the nature of reading stories, experiencing narratives and ...
Vladimir Nabokov’s novels seem to hold, for many, a strange fascination. This essay began as an inqu...
This study investigated the nature of the two notions, memories and time in relation to narrative in...
This dissertation defines “artifact texts” as works of fiction utilizing a narrative device in which...
This paper focuses on Nabokov's American fiction as novels of the so-called “Long 1950s” and tries t...
The analysis of the novel Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov (English and Russian versions) has revealed the...
Vladimir Nabokov's "Lolita" is known for its seductive writing despite its destructive subject matte...
This essay will explore the treatment of loss and grief in Vladimir Nabokov's novels Pale Fire and L...
The main focus of this paper is on the narrative strategy used by fan writers in the process of inte...
The present study is an attempt to use “textually oriented discourse analysis” of Norman Fairclough,...
Artifice is a major preoccupation in Nabokov's English novels. Parody of literary genres and stances...
Brian Boyd mentions that “Vladimir Nabokov learned to write fiction that was immediately accessible ...
Postmodern literary fiction relies heavily on intertextual connections between works and genres. Vla...
This thesis explores the relationship between aesthetics and ethics in Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita, as...
This article aims at, if not answering, at least raising the question: What is it exactly that we re...