The object of this thesis is to analyse Brooke-Rose's refusal of Realism and the critique of the notion of identity she accomplishes in her novels. My work therefore concentrates on both the question of how far Brooke-Rose's fiction interrogates the idea of Reality proper to Realism and, as a complement to that, how far it is a fiction that questions the notion of identity as defined by Western humanism and corroborated by Realism
International audienceThis book treats all of Brookner’s twenty-two short novels as one monolithic f...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, taki...
The objective of this thesis is to explore metaphors of the body as they are used in certain Austral...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN023732 / BLDSC - British Library D...
The aim of this article is to show how in her novel *Between*, Brooke-Rose, in parallel to Derrida a...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
This thesis examines the novels of Christine Brooke-Rose and A. S. Byatt in order to question the ex...
The genesis for my thesis Cul-de-sac, a work of realist fiction, lies in the notion that the past al...
Fictional Selves: Creating Identity in the Victorian Fictional Autobiography is about fictionality a...
There is no home in this world for colonising peoples, but the desire for a place or a state to call...
In reading any of the experimental novels Christine Brooke-Rose has produced over the years, one is ...
In our current world, questions of the transnational, location, land, and identity confront us with ...
grantor: University of TorontoHenry James's handling of character raises questions about t...
The image of the spiral underlies many of Brooke-Rose’s novels. In particular, it is central in her ...
(print) ix, 254 p. ; 24 cm.The unbearable lightness of being : a preface -- The specter as sign : gh...
International audienceThis book treats all of Brookner’s twenty-two short novels as one monolithic f...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, taki...
The objective of this thesis is to explore metaphors of the body as they are used in certain Austral...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN023732 / BLDSC - British Library D...
The aim of this article is to show how in her novel *Between*, Brooke-Rose, in parallel to Derrida a...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
This thesis examines the novels of Christine Brooke-Rose and A. S. Byatt in order to question the ex...
The genesis for my thesis Cul-de-sac, a work of realist fiction, lies in the notion that the past al...
Fictional Selves: Creating Identity in the Victorian Fictional Autobiography is about fictionality a...
There is no home in this world for colonising peoples, but the desire for a place or a state to call...
In reading any of the experimental novels Christine Brooke-Rose has produced over the years, one is ...
In our current world, questions of the transnational, location, land, and identity confront us with ...
grantor: University of TorontoHenry James's handling of character raises questions about t...
The image of the spiral underlies many of Brooke-Rose’s novels. In particular, it is central in her ...
(print) ix, 254 p. ; 24 cm.The unbearable lightness of being : a preface -- The specter as sign : gh...
International audienceThis book treats all of Brookner’s twenty-two short novels as one monolithic f...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, taki...
The objective of this thesis is to explore metaphors of the body as they are used in certain Austral...