As a young artist, Leonard Cohen continually attempted to navigate between the conflicting ideologies of bohemia and bourgeoisie, and his struggle was representative of the widespread postwar North American concern with marginality, conformity and alienation. Cohen's fiction, in turn, engages with these various postwar North American values and ideologies. More specifically, his two novels examine how the conditions of alienation, autonomy and authenticity combine and interact to either uphold or destroy one's identity. The Favorite Game portrays a young artist who cultivates alienation, or the image of alienation, because he believes it fosters creativity. Beautiful Losers illustrates the fate of a character whose individuality is threaten...
Since his comeback on stage in 2008, Leonard Cohen (1934-2016) has been portrayed in the surprisingl...
Since his comeback on stage in 2008, Leonard Cohen (1934-2016) has been portrayed in the surprisingl...
Christina Stead is a modernist whose life and art are profoundly informed by socialism. Chapter I de...
The art of Leonard Cohen has been the subject of several recent literary studies and numerous short ...
Leonard Cohen is mostly known as a singer-songwriter. Although his poems and novels are not as widel...
The concerns of the artist-figure are a central issue in the work of Leonard Cohen. His novels, poem...
This thesis examines Leonard Cohen’s postmodern novel Beautiful Losers (1966). It considers the nove...
The chapter, "Nightmares of identity: Nationalism and loss in Leonard Cohen's Beautiful Losers" was ...
Leonard Cohen's novel, Beautiful Losers, provides insight into the changing relationship between hum...
This thesis investigates Leonard Cohen's Beautiful Losers and Hubert Aquin's Prochain épisode in ter...
While Beautiful Losers deserves its reputation as a subversive text insomuch as its overall libidina...
This thesis considers the theme of suffering and its resolution in the novels of Jack Kerouac, Leona...
This study examines the influence of various Western mystical traditions on Leonard Cohen’s second n...
Play and games are a common trope in modern and contemporary art. In the early twentieth century, Du...
The pursuit of selfhood in Graham Greene's novels emerges from a radical dichotomy between mind and ...
Since his comeback on stage in 2008, Leonard Cohen (1934-2016) has been portrayed in the surprisingl...
Since his comeback on stage in 2008, Leonard Cohen (1934-2016) has been portrayed in the surprisingl...
Christina Stead is a modernist whose life and art are profoundly informed by socialism. Chapter I de...
The art of Leonard Cohen has been the subject of several recent literary studies and numerous short ...
Leonard Cohen is mostly known as a singer-songwriter. Although his poems and novels are not as widel...
The concerns of the artist-figure are a central issue in the work of Leonard Cohen. His novels, poem...
This thesis examines Leonard Cohen’s postmodern novel Beautiful Losers (1966). It considers the nove...
The chapter, "Nightmares of identity: Nationalism and loss in Leonard Cohen's Beautiful Losers" was ...
Leonard Cohen's novel, Beautiful Losers, provides insight into the changing relationship between hum...
This thesis investigates Leonard Cohen's Beautiful Losers and Hubert Aquin's Prochain épisode in ter...
While Beautiful Losers deserves its reputation as a subversive text insomuch as its overall libidina...
This thesis considers the theme of suffering and its resolution in the novels of Jack Kerouac, Leona...
This study examines the influence of various Western mystical traditions on Leonard Cohen’s second n...
Play and games are a common trope in modern and contemporary art. In the early twentieth century, Du...
The pursuit of selfhood in Graham Greene's novels emerges from a radical dichotomy between mind and ...
Since his comeback on stage in 2008, Leonard Cohen (1934-2016) has been portrayed in the surprisingl...
Since his comeback on stage in 2008, Leonard Cohen (1934-2016) has been portrayed in the surprisingl...
Christina Stead is a modernist whose life and art are profoundly informed by socialism. Chapter I de...