This practice-led project asks: how do writers of madness memoirs represent the discontinuity and incoherence of the madness experience, and how do I, as a writer, approach this? It finds that while the experience of madness is discontinuous and incoherent, writers choose to reconfigure their experiences into traditional narrative forms that adhere to expectations of continuity, coherence, and temporal linearity. As a practice-led project, in interrogating the research question, it comprises an academic exegesis, which employs the theories of sociologist, Arthur W. Frank, to justify discontinuous narrativisation and a madness memoir, entitled The Wolf
This dissertation examines how competing narratives related to madness and mental health can provide...
This article presents an autoethnography in the form of a short story of the experiences of a mental...
Ann Quin’s final, unfinished book, The Unmapped Country (1973), narrates its protagonist’s experienc...
In this paper I consider some of the implications, possibilities and dangers of addressing the exper...
In this paper I examine some of the implications, possibilities, and dangers of addressing the expe...
Madness has long been a popular theme for literature, featuring as a trope of horror, mystery, trage...
This study uses a narrative analytic approach to explore the similarities and differences between pr...
This study uses a narrative analytic approach to explore the similarities and differences between pr...
There has been a renewed interest in the subjectivity of madness through the medium of first person ...
Chaos narratives depict the absence of a narrative order in the text and an adherence to all the fea...
This paper explores the relationship between madness and identity making, focussing on the impact of...
My thesis in this paper is that in ‘fiction’, or to be more precise, in metaphorical, poetic modes o...
In October 2013, Arthur W. Frank presented the John McKendy Lecture in Narrative at St. Thomas Unive...
The present article studies the relation between autobiography and fiction in Flaubert’s Memoirs of ...
The paper explains the capacity of narrative to represent memoirs of the Holocaust with its unbeliev...
This dissertation examines how competing narratives related to madness and mental health can provide...
This article presents an autoethnography in the form of a short story of the experiences of a mental...
Ann Quin’s final, unfinished book, The Unmapped Country (1973), narrates its protagonist’s experienc...
In this paper I consider some of the implications, possibilities and dangers of addressing the exper...
In this paper I examine some of the implications, possibilities, and dangers of addressing the expe...
Madness has long been a popular theme for literature, featuring as a trope of horror, mystery, trage...
This study uses a narrative analytic approach to explore the similarities and differences between pr...
This study uses a narrative analytic approach to explore the similarities and differences between pr...
There has been a renewed interest in the subjectivity of madness through the medium of first person ...
Chaos narratives depict the absence of a narrative order in the text and an adherence to all the fea...
This paper explores the relationship between madness and identity making, focussing on the impact of...
My thesis in this paper is that in ‘fiction’, or to be more precise, in metaphorical, poetic modes o...
In October 2013, Arthur W. Frank presented the John McKendy Lecture in Narrative at St. Thomas Unive...
The present article studies the relation between autobiography and fiction in Flaubert’s Memoirs of ...
The paper explains the capacity of narrative to represent memoirs of the Holocaust with its unbeliev...
This dissertation examines how competing narratives related to madness and mental health can provide...
This article presents an autoethnography in the form of a short story of the experiences of a mental...
Ann Quin’s final, unfinished book, The Unmapped Country (1973), narrates its protagonist’s experienc...