Thesis (M.A.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2005Janet Frame's ultimate novel, The Carpathians, joins the New Zealand tradition of literature of the uncanny, which has addressed the problem of post-colonial identity, though the novel's metafictional and psychological complexity are uniquely Framian. The work gains richness from a psychoanalytic reading with attention to the character John Henry Brecon, who claims authorship of the novel on its final page. As ekphratic author, he employs the uncanny mode, developing motifs and themes of heimlich and unheimlich set forth by Sigmund Freud's 1919 essay, 'The Uncanny.' John Henry's novel evokes uncanny sentiments through suppression and release of his subconscious and through uncertainty as to ...
Derrida suggests that spectres disrupt temporality, pointing to the future as well as to the past, d...
This investigation considers some aspects of Janet Frame's fiction that have hitherto remained obscu...
Book synopsis: The uncanny is an experience of disorientation, of something disturbing, so that our ...
Focusing on four novels by Janet Frame in dialogue with texts by Freud, Zizek, Lacan, and Silverman...
Focusing on four novels by Janet Frame in dialogue with texts by Freud, Zizek, Lacan, and Silverman,...
This thesis investigates the claims Janet Frame makes for the imagination in her novels and three vo...
Janet Frame’s novels Intensive Care (1970/1987), Daughter Buffalo (1972), and Living in the Maniotot...
This essay examines Janet Frame's early short story "The Lagoon", and argues that the story alludes...
Art and the initiation of the artist into the skills of her craft, along with the fiction making hab...
As has long been established, Janet Frame's work raises questions about representation, creativity a...
Janet Frame came into uneasy collision with the ghost of Katherine Mansfield, the ‘godmother of New ...
Janet Frame's 1979 novel Living in the Maniototo features a ubiquitous narrator whose multiple perso...
This dissertation is an attempt to rethink the relation between narrative and the historical categor...
This thesis focuses on the uncanny in literature produced in America during the first decade followi...
The Uncanny whose presence at least refers back to Freud's 1919 essay of the same title has been rec...
Derrida suggests that spectres disrupt temporality, pointing to the future as well as to the past, d...
This investigation considers some aspects of Janet Frame's fiction that have hitherto remained obscu...
Book synopsis: The uncanny is an experience of disorientation, of something disturbing, so that our ...
Focusing on four novels by Janet Frame in dialogue with texts by Freud, Zizek, Lacan, and Silverman...
Focusing on four novels by Janet Frame in dialogue with texts by Freud, Zizek, Lacan, and Silverman,...
This thesis investigates the claims Janet Frame makes for the imagination in her novels and three vo...
Janet Frame’s novels Intensive Care (1970/1987), Daughter Buffalo (1972), and Living in the Maniotot...
This essay examines Janet Frame's early short story "The Lagoon", and argues that the story alludes...
Art and the initiation of the artist into the skills of her craft, along with the fiction making hab...
As has long been established, Janet Frame's work raises questions about representation, creativity a...
Janet Frame came into uneasy collision with the ghost of Katherine Mansfield, the ‘godmother of New ...
Janet Frame's 1979 novel Living in the Maniototo features a ubiquitous narrator whose multiple perso...
This dissertation is an attempt to rethink the relation between narrative and the historical categor...
This thesis focuses on the uncanny in literature produced in America during the first decade followi...
The Uncanny whose presence at least refers back to Freud's 1919 essay of the same title has been rec...
Derrida suggests that spectres disrupt temporality, pointing to the future as well as to the past, d...
This investigation considers some aspects of Janet Frame's fiction that have hitherto remained obscu...
Book synopsis: The uncanny is an experience of disorientation, of something disturbing, so that our ...