This article discusses the ways in which the gentleman characters in Joyce Carol Oates’s novels The Accursed and Carthage are identified with notions of displacement, and examines the ways in which the evocation of stereotypes contributes to the identification of each character as a “southern gentleman.” Oates creates two characters on the edge of their communities, men for whom the “gentleman” is a persona they adopt to varying degrees of success. She deconstructs the myth of regional exceptionality in The Accursed by showing a southern gentleman and a northern pastor who fall prey to the same moral weaknesses. In Carthage¸ the Investigator’s ability to conjure the gentleman type emphasizes the artificiality of this mythical southern chara...
Key words: violence, superficial, realism, gothic, parody ABSTRACT This study aims at presenting a...
This essay investigates the gender roles in Joyce Carol Oates' The Falls. The novel concentrates ona...
Review of Joyce Carol Oates\u27s novel The Man Without a Shadow, focusing on the author\u27s represe...
Cet article étudie la façon dont Joyce Carol Oates, dans les romans Les Maudits et Carthage, crée de...
Racist politics and white moral superiority are persistently parodied and subverted in Oates’s recen...
This dissertation presents a thematic analysis of Joyce Carol Oates’s (1938) novels written since 19...
In this chapter, McLennan argues that in Joyce Carol Oates’s baffling, enormous novel The Accursed (...
Joyce Carol Oates is undoubtedly one of the contemporary writers in the American literature who writ...
Reviving the Southern Gentleman: Ideals of Manhood in Madeleine L’Engle’s Fiction. At the beginning ...
International audienceThough no Oates story exclusively uses New Orleans as setting, the city does p...
The aim of this abstract is to show the image of South in Absalom, Absalom! which i...
The paper examines some of the Gothic features used in character development in William Faulkner’s A...
In A Bloodsmoor Romance, Joyce Carol Oates uses a parody of nineteenth-century attitudes to women to...
Much of the literary criticism on Kate Chopin’s The Awakening has focused upon the main character, E...
The American planter has mostly been presented as the epitome of the romantic cavalier legend that c...
Key words: violence, superficial, realism, gothic, parody ABSTRACT This study aims at presenting a...
This essay investigates the gender roles in Joyce Carol Oates' The Falls. The novel concentrates ona...
Review of Joyce Carol Oates\u27s novel The Man Without a Shadow, focusing on the author\u27s represe...
Cet article étudie la façon dont Joyce Carol Oates, dans les romans Les Maudits et Carthage, crée de...
Racist politics and white moral superiority are persistently parodied and subverted in Oates’s recen...
This dissertation presents a thematic analysis of Joyce Carol Oates’s (1938) novels written since 19...
In this chapter, McLennan argues that in Joyce Carol Oates’s baffling, enormous novel The Accursed (...
Joyce Carol Oates is undoubtedly one of the contemporary writers in the American literature who writ...
Reviving the Southern Gentleman: Ideals of Manhood in Madeleine L’Engle’s Fiction. At the beginning ...
International audienceThough no Oates story exclusively uses New Orleans as setting, the city does p...
The aim of this abstract is to show the image of South in Absalom, Absalom! which i...
The paper examines some of the Gothic features used in character development in William Faulkner’s A...
In A Bloodsmoor Romance, Joyce Carol Oates uses a parody of nineteenth-century attitudes to women to...
Much of the literary criticism on Kate Chopin’s The Awakening has focused upon the main character, E...
The American planter has mostly been presented as the epitome of the romantic cavalier legend that c...
Key words: violence, superficial, realism, gothic, parody ABSTRACT This study aims at presenting a...
This essay investigates the gender roles in Joyce Carol Oates' The Falls. The novel concentrates ona...
Review of Joyce Carol Oates\u27s novel The Man Without a Shadow, focusing on the author\u27s represe...