The narrator of The Country of the Pointed Firs is an elusive figure. A narrator who is also a character in the fiction, she nevertheless reveals very little about herself as a character in the course of her narration. She is the unnamed speaking I, and she is you to Mrs. Todd and other characters. Although the narrator apparently travels to Dunnet Landing from a city, we don\u27t know where she lives the rest of the year; and we can only assume from her time spent in the schoolhouse engaged in literary employments that she writes for pay. But critics (and I happily include myself) find the narrator as a character irresistible, and they expend much effort on constructing her from scant internal evidence and on reading Pointed Firs as ...
The article deals with the role of the implied reader in Evelyn Waugh’s novels. An attempt will be m...
From Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tim’s Cabin to Charles Dickens’ Hard Times, the genre of sentim...
This thesis addresses how Charlotte Brontë’s Villette creates a sympathetic economy that challenges ...
The narrator of The Country of the Pointed Firs is an elusive figure. A narrator who is also a chara...
Although Willa Cather\u27s My Antonia and Sarah Orne Jewett\u27s The Country of the Pointed Firs hav...
Sarah Orne Jewett’s The Country of the Pointed Firs (1896) has long been central to literary critica...
Since its publication in 1896, critics of Sarah Orne Jewett\u27s The Country of the Pointed Firs hav...
“In reading over a package of letters from Sarah Orne Jewett,” Willa Cather wrote in her preface to ...
I personally find most Realistic literature lacking whatever mysterious element it is that evokes fr...
In "Sarah Orne Jewett: New England Pastoralist" I have tried to demonstrate that an old tradition ma...
Textual Encounters: Reading Character in the Nineteenth-Century Novel explores how readers experienc...
This dissertation examines how writing and publishing serial fiction exacerbated nineteenth-century ...
Readers of novels seem to have a natural, almost instinctive, tendency to perceive the voices of the...
'A lost lady' (1923) is a novel by Willa Cather that deals mainly with the theme of adultery. Howeve...
From Masters of the Marketplace: British Women Novelists of the 1750s. Bethlehem: Lehigh University ...
The article deals with the role of the implied reader in Evelyn Waugh’s novels. An attempt will be m...
From Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tim’s Cabin to Charles Dickens’ Hard Times, the genre of sentim...
This thesis addresses how Charlotte Brontë’s Villette creates a sympathetic economy that challenges ...
The narrator of The Country of the Pointed Firs is an elusive figure. A narrator who is also a chara...
Although Willa Cather\u27s My Antonia and Sarah Orne Jewett\u27s The Country of the Pointed Firs hav...
Sarah Orne Jewett’s The Country of the Pointed Firs (1896) has long been central to literary critica...
Since its publication in 1896, critics of Sarah Orne Jewett\u27s The Country of the Pointed Firs hav...
“In reading over a package of letters from Sarah Orne Jewett,” Willa Cather wrote in her preface to ...
I personally find most Realistic literature lacking whatever mysterious element it is that evokes fr...
In "Sarah Orne Jewett: New England Pastoralist" I have tried to demonstrate that an old tradition ma...
Textual Encounters: Reading Character in the Nineteenth-Century Novel explores how readers experienc...
This dissertation examines how writing and publishing serial fiction exacerbated nineteenth-century ...
Readers of novels seem to have a natural, almost instinctive, tendency to perceive the voices of the...
'A lost lady' (1923) is a novel by Willa Cather that deals mainly with the theme of adultery. Howeve...
From Masters of the Marketplace: British Women Novelists of the 1750s. Bethlehem: Lehigh University ...
The article deals with the role of the implied reader in Evelyn Waugh’s novels. An attempt will be m...
From Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tim’s Cabin to Charles Dickens’ Hard Times, the genre of sentim...
This thesis addresses how Charlotte Brontë’s Villette creates a sympathetic economy that challenges ...