The present article departs from the concept of "mimicry" or "masquerade", theorised by such feminist critics as Joan Riviere (1929), Luce Irigaray (1985), or Mary Ann Doane (1991). This implies that women deliberately assume the feminine style and posture assigned to them within patriarchal discourse with a subversive rather than merely imitative intention by means of what Gerard Genette calls "saturation". In particular, this study focuses on Katherine Mansfield's satire of gender stereotypes in Germany. Through this mimicry, Mansfield aims to prove that such stereotypes go beyond national boundaries and affect the people of different countries similarly-in this case Germany and England. The selected texts are two short stories included w...
The nineteenth century in Germany posed a repressive environment for-women as they were defined as ...
This paper looks at how the new two volume edition of the Collected Works of Katherine Mansfield, ed...
Mansfield’s travels in Europe after 1909, make her resemble the figure of the postcolonial woman wri...
The present article departs from the concept of “mimicry” or “masquerade”, theorised by such feminis...
Katherine Mansfield and Virginia Woolf nourished a peculiar stream of parallel foreignness and kinsh...
This thesis is the first full-length study to explore the reception of Katherine Mansfield’s works i...
Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923), British Modernist writer whose search for authentic selves in the l...
This study analyzes of the short stories from the collection Bliss & other stories (1920), by the Ne...
Edith Wharton is commonly perceived as a reactionary conservative looking back to the past. In this ...
This essay is situated in relation to the critical commonplace that the contrasting literary modes a...
This article examines Katherine Mansfield's aesthetics and attitude to the relation between what she...
Katherine Mansfield\u27s cousin, Elizabeth von Arnim was a well-known author of twenty-one popular w...
This paper begins by stressing the need for a more critical approach to the work of Katherine Mansf...
Readers have often been fascinated and perplexed by Katherine Mansfield's fiction and often are at o...
In her quest to get as much as one can out of life (68), Lily Bart in Edith Wharton\u27s House of ...
The nineteenth century in Germany posed a repressive environment for-women as they were defined as ...
This paper looks at how the new two volume edition of the Collected Works of Katherine Mansfield, ed...
Mansfield’s travels in Europe after 1909, make her resemble the figure of the postcolonial woman wri...
The present article departs from the concept of “mimicry” or “masquerade”, theorised by such feminis...
Katherine Mansfield and Virginia Woolf nourished a peculiar stream of parallel foreignness and kinsh...
This thesis is the first full-length study to explore the reception of Katherine Mansfield’s works i...
Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923), British Modernist writer whose search for authentic selves in the l...
This study analyzes of the short stories from the collection Bliss & other stories (1920), by the Ne...
Edith Wharton is commonly perceived as a reactionary conservative looking back to the past. In this ...
This essay is situated in relation to the critical commonplace that the contrasting literary modes a...
This article examines Katherine Mansfield's aesthetics and attitude to the relation between what she...
Katherine Mansfield\u27s cousin, Elizabeth von Arnim was a well-known author of twenty-one popular w...
This paper begins by stressing the need for a more critical approach to the work of Katherine Mansf...
Readers have often been fascinated and perplexed by Katherine Mansfield's fiction and often are at o...
In her quest to get as much as one can out of life (68), Lily Bart in Edith Wharton\u27s House of ...
The nineteenth century in Germany posed a repressive environment for-women as they were defined as ...
This paper looks at how the new two volume edition of the Collected Works of Katherine Mansfield, ed...
Mansfield’s travels in Europe after 1909, make her resemble the figure of the postcolonial woman wri...