The aim of this article is to show how in her novel *Between*, Brooke-Rose, in parallel to Derrida and other theoreticians, imaginatively deconstructs one of the main notions on which Western metaphysics is based, namely the concept of identity, and to suggest that her novel could be read as a first example of what Barthes would later call ‘the text of pleasure’ (distinguished by the complete loss of origin and identity). It is in fact by referring to some of Barthes’ central notions that my article shows how, contrary to Western philosophical tradition, Brooke-Rose suggests that language does not simply represent, but constructs Reality, and that there is no fixed identity permanently present in the individual, as identity itself is a prod...
This thesis uses literary analysis to explore the significant role which narrative plays in how we c...
I will start from the question posed by Tina Chanter in a paper published in 1997: “Has Derrida’s wo...
Drawing heavily on the work of classicist Page duBois, which eloquently explains the emergence, in ...
The image of the spiral underlies many of Brooke-Rose’s novels. In particular, it is central in her ...
The object of this thesis is to analyse Brooke-Rose's refusal of Realism and the critique of the not...
The focus of inquiry in this thesis is female identity and its representation through Language as se...
Many of the ways in which we currently engage and produce literature – particularly the literature o...
This article discusses the notion of the fluidity of sexual identity in light of Luce Irigaray’s acc...
This dissertation is an exploration of the co-imbrications of Being, life, and sex: of the sexuate d...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
Becoming Identities: The Philosophical Subject, Intersectionality and Assemblage honors and engages ...
Indetenninables, anomalies, intersections and rhizomatic networks establish the foundation of female...
This thesis is an examination of language in general and literary language in particular through a c...
This thesis explores how language and materiality encounter each other, shaping the world and how we...
It is by now a common place in identity theory that the construction of an identity for the individu...
This thesis uses literary analysis to explore the significant role which narrative plays in how we c...
I will start from the question posed by Tina Chanter in a paper published in 1997: “Has Derrida’s wo...
Drawing heavily on the work of classicist Page duBois, which eloquently explains the emergence, in ...
The image of the spiral underlies many of Brooke-Rose’s novels. In particular, it is central in her ...
The object of this thesis is to analyse Brooke-Rose's refusal of Realism and the critique of the not...
The focus of inquiry in this thesis is female identity and its representation through Language as se...
Many of the ways in which we currently engage and produce literature – particularly the literature o...
This article discusses the notion of the fluidity of sexual identity in light of Luce Irigaray’s acc...
This dissertation is an exploration of the co-imbrications of Being, life, and sex: of the sexuate d...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
Becoming Identities: The Philosophical Subject, Intersectionality and Assemblage honors and engages ...
Indetenninables, anomalies, intersections and rhizomatic networks establish the foundation of female...
This thesis is an examination of language in general and literary language in particular through a c...
This thesis explores how language and materiality encounter each other, shaping the world and how we...
It is by now a common place in identity theory that the construction of an identity for the individu...
This thesis uses literary analysis to explore the significant role which narrative plays in how we c...
I will start from the question posed by Tina Chanter in a paper published in 1997: “Has Derrida’s wo...
Drawing heavily on the work of classicist Page duBois, which eloquently explains the emergence, in ...