Throughout her work, Margaret Atwood uses literal and metaphoric camera images, including photographs, commercial and non-commercial art, movies, television programs, filmstrips, and mental pictures as symbols of seeing and being in the world. Her characters and personas often seem to view life through a celluloid film. Seeing themselves, the past, and other people as photograph trophies or the raw material for popular journalistic pieces on lifestyles, they fear the attack of camera-guns which turn them into products for consumption, and yet, paradoxically, they seek validation in being seen, trying to escape massive involvement by creating tourist-brochure realities. Bodily Harm, like the earlier work, presents a character who specializes...
Popular discourses are ubiquitous in the writing of Margaret Atwood. Her novels, poetry and critical...
Performance deals with embodiment, presence, agency and event. It is related to representation and c...
The photograph is of interest to the writer because it is uniquely a product both of the realm of ob...
Throughout her work, Margaret Atwood uses literal and metaphoric camera images, including photograph...
Margaret Atwood's Bodily Harm is in one sense about the tension between surface perception and depth...
The thesis deals with the early works of the Canadian writer Margaret Atwood - novels The Edible Wom...
Margaret Atwood’s Bodily Harm is a novel that highlights upon the passivity revealed by th...
The basic outline of Margaret Atwood's Lady Oracle, as well as of her earlier novels -- The Edible W...
Margaret Atwood's extensive back catalogue includes a group of fictive autobiographies, each engaged...
Margaret Atwood, a prominent Canadian novelist, in her novels has proficiently and subtly voiced tra...
Victimisation Metaphors in Margaret Atwood s novel Surfacing by Berit Vike Metaphors have long ceas...
This thesis discusses chronologically, the adaptation and transformation of the Gothic in four of M...
Thinking through Margaret Atwood's 1981 novel Bodily Harm and the 1992 Supreme Court of Canada case ...
This essay examines scholarly discourses about embodiment, and their increasing scholarly currency, ...
The Canadian writer Margaret Atwood has created various impressive women characters in her fictions....
Popular discourses are ubiquitous in the writing of Margaret Atwood. Her novels, poetry and critical...
Performance deals with embodiment, presence, agency and event. It is related to representation and c...
The photograph is of interest to the writer because it is uniquely a product both of the realm of ob...
Throughout her work, Margaret Atwood uses literal and metaphoric camera images, including photograph...
Margaret Atwood's Bodily Harm is in one sense about the tension between surface perception and depth...
The thesis deals with the early works of the Canadian writer Margaret Atwood - novels The Edible Wom...
Margaret Atwood’s Bodily Harm is a novel that highlights upon the passivity revealed by th...
The basic outline of Margaret Atwood's Lady Oracle, as well as of her earlier novels -- The Edible W...
Margaret Atwood's extensive back catalogue includes a group of fictive autobiographies, each engaged...
Margaret Atwood, a prominent Canadian novelist, in her novels has proficiently and subtly voiced tra...
Victimisation Metaphors in Margaret Atwood s novel Surfacing by Berit Vike Metaphors have long ceas...
This thesis discusses chronologically, the adaptation and transformation of the Gothic in four of M...
Thinking through Margaret Atwood's 1981 novel Bodily Harm and the 1992 Supreme Court of Canada case ...
This essay examines scholarly discourses about embodiment, and their increasing scholarly currency, ...
The Canadian writer Margaret Atwood has created various impressive women characters in her fictions....
Popular discourses are ubiquitous in the writing of Margaret Atwood. Her novels, poetry and critical...
Performance deals with embodiment, presence, agency and event. It is related to representation and c...
The photograph is of interest to the writer because it is uniquely a product both of the realm of ob...