Over the years the work of Janet Frame has been subjected to appraisal and appropriation by critics of the most diversified political persuasions. Frank Sargeson\u27s early reception of The Lagoon testifies to his readiness to incorporate the younger writer into the mainstream literary tradition in New Zealand and to attribute to her the prevailing monocultural, universalist sensibility. He heralds the book as an unprecedented mapping of Pakeha culture: \u27There is very little of what is common experience for every New Zealander that hasn\u27t found its way into the twenty-four stories: it is all there - soil, sea and sky ... all seen and felt as though with dazzled wonder and delight for the first time in human history.\u2
This article explores Frame’s ‘undecidability’, the modus operandi which collapses conventional bina...
International audienceThis essay proposes to analyse the way Janet Frame defamiliarises the conventi...
Focusing on four novels by Janet Frame in dialogue with texts by Freud, Zizek, Lacan, and Silverman...
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...
New Zealand women\u27s writing, gathering momentum since the late \u2770s, shows no sign of abating....
The article reviews and analysis the novel 'The Edge of the Alphabet' by New Zealand author, Janet F...
In reading the literary criticism on Janet Frame's work it soon turns out that Frame was deconstruct...
An introduction to a special focus in the Journal of Postcolonial Writing of three articles on the w...
The cultural nationalist narrative, and the myths of origin and invention associated with it, cast a...
Janet Frame came into uneasy collision with the ghost of Katherine Mansfield, the ‘godmother of New ...
Frequently referred to as New Zealand’s most famous and least public author, Janet Frame occupies a ...
In 1951, Janet Frame published her first book The Lagoon and Other Stories, a collection which would...
In 1951, Janet Frame published her first book The Lagoon and Other Stories, a collection which would...
Janet Frame travelled abroad on numerous occasions during her life, as a much-needed cathartic exper...
This article explores Frame’s ‘undecidability’, the modus operandi which collapses conventional bina...
International audienceThis essay proposes to analyse the way Janet Frame defamiliarises the conventi...
Focusing on four novels by Janet Frame in dialogue with texts by Freud, Zizek, Lacan, and Silverman...
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...
New Zealand women\u27s writing, gathering momentum since the late \u2770s, shows no sign of abating....
The article reviews and analysis the novel 'The Edge of the Alphabet' by New Zealand author, Janet F...
In reading the literary criticism on Janet Frame's work it soon turns out that Frame was deconstruct...
An introduction to a special focus in the Journal of Postcolonial Writing of three articles on the w...
The cultural nationalist narrative, and the myths of origin and invention associated with it, cast a...
Janet Frame came into uneasy collision with the ghost of Katherine Mansfield, the ‘godmother of New ...
Frequently referred to as New Zealand’s most famous and least public author, Janet Frame occupies a ...
In 1951, Janet Frame published her first book The Lagoon and Other Stories, a collection which would...
In 1951, Janet Frame published her first book The Lagoon and Other Stories, a collection which would...
Janet Frame travelled abroad on numerous occasions during her life, as a much-needed cathartic exper...
This article explores Frame’s ‘undecidability’, the modus operandi which collapses conventional bina...
International audienceThis essay proposes to analyse the way Janet Frame defamiliarises the conventi...
Focusing on four novels by Janet Frame in dialogue with texts by Freud, Zizek, Lacan, and Silverman...