According to William Van O’Connor, the grotesque as a literary character in American literature has become a prevalent form of expressing the nature of modern man. O’Connor states that American authors are “preoccupied with the irrational, the unpredictable, the bizarre, with the grotesque…,” and that they present man in an inflexible social order
Historically speaking, the South has maintained rigid, male dominated constructions of gender, which...
This study explores the use of the grotesque mode in the fictions of Mark Twain and of William Faulk...
In his novels, John Steinbeck offers cross-section narratives of Western Society in which he investi...
According to William Van O’Connor, the grotesque as a literary character in American literature has ...
In his novel Winesburg, Ohio, Sherwood Anderson describes a grotesque as someone who has “snatched u...
This study shows how the Grotesque Hero evolves from the grotesque victim in selected American novel...
Winesburg, Ohio (1919) is made up of twenty-five short stories. Though each story generally has a ...
This paper analyses characters of three short stories: “Hands”, “Adventure” and “A Man of Ideas” of ...
After a general historical outline of the term and concept 'grotesque' attention is focused on the g...
After a general historical outline of the term and concept 'grotesque' attention is focused on the g...
This dissertation explores a history of the grotesque and its meaning in art and literature along wi...
The nightmare visions described by early American writers such as William Bradford, Mary Rowlandson,...
The nightmare visions described by early American writers such as William Bradford, Mary Rowlandson,...
I consider Mikhail Bakhtin\u27s notion of the grotesque representation of the body in dialogue with ...
Abstract: Sherwood Anderson occupies a distinctive position in the history of American letters. He w...
Historically speaking, the South has maintained rigid, male dominated constructions of gender, which...
This study explores the use of the grotesque mode in the fictions of Mark Twain and of William Faulk...
In his novels, John Steinbeck offers cross-section narratives of Western Society in which he investi...
According to William Van O’Connor, the grotesque as a literary character in American literature has ...
In his novel Winesburg, Ohio, Sherwood Anderson describes a grotesque as someone who has “snatched u...
This study shows how the Grotesque Hero evolves from the grotesque victim in selected American novel...
Winesburg, Ohio (1919) is made up of twenty-five short stories. Though each story generally has a ...
This paper analyses characters of three short stories: “Hands”, “Adventure” and “A Man of Ideas” of ...
After a general historical outline of the term and concept 'grotesque' attention is focused on the g...
After a general historical outline of the term and concept 'grotesque' attention is focused on the g...
This dissertation explores a history of the grotesque and its meaning in art and literature along wi...
The nightmare visions described by early American writers such as William Bradford, Mary Rowlandson,...
The nightmare visions described by early American writers such as William Bradford, Mary Rowlandson,...
I consider Mikhail Bakhtin\u27s notion of the grotesque representation of the body in dialogue with ...
Abstract: Sherwood Anderson occupies a distinctive position in the history of American letters. He w...
Historically speaking, the South has maintained rigid, male dominated constructions of gender, which...
This study explores the use of the grotesque mode in the fictions of Mark Twain and of William Faulk...
In his novels, John Steinbeck offers cross-section narratives of Western Society in which he investi...