The study explores the ways in which prose fiction can be seen to respond to or read itself, how writing allegedly explicates or reflects itself, and how resistance is realized both in reading and writing. These factors are investigated in John Updike's novels Rabbit Redux (1971), A Month of Sundays (1975), and The Coup (1978). The study is informed by narratology, reader-response, feminist and gender criticism, theories of self-reflexivity and resisting reading, and deconstruction. The communication between the narrator and narratee agents is conceived in terms of reading operations, especially commentary. The function of the interpreting character is thematized as that of the interpretant, the agent dramatizing and anticipating the actual...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
In “Resisting the Reader: Textual Recalcitrance in British Novels, 1917-2011,” I focus on a radical,...
John Updike’s use of setting in his fiction has elicited different and even conflicting reactions fr...
My thesis engages with reader-response theory in order to show how the realisations it makes might b...
My thesis engages with reader-response theory in order to show how the realisations it makes might b...
This work seeks to isolate and highlight, through the lens of cognitive narratology, several key mom...
In an attempt to gain a deeper understanding of the effects of Cold War culture on John Updike\u27s ...
This thesis aims towards a revitalisation and reformulation of reader-response theory, focusing on t...
Literature is the reflection of life or society. Whatever is going on in the society it reflects all...
Although Updike has been recognized as one of the few contemporary writers worthy of serious conside...
Jane Eyre (1847) is a multidimensional novel in which many different interpretations are blended tog...
This thesis explores the approach to death in the novels of John Updike published in the 1960's, nam...
This thesis is a scholarly examination of John Updike’s first two novels of the Rabbit saga: Rabbit,...
The aim of Text and Reader is to find a critical approach that links a novel\u27s form to its socio-...
My dissertation explores two critical points in understanding John Updike\u27s recent career. First,...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
In “Resisting the Reader: Textual Recalcitrance in British Novels, 1917-2011,” I focus on a radical,...
John Updike’s use of setting in his fiction has elicited different and even conflicting reactions fr...
My thesis engages with reader-response theory in order to show how the realisations it makes might b...
My thesis engages with reader-response theory in order to show how the realisations it makes might b...
This work seeks to isolate and highlight, through the lens of cognitive narratology, several key mom...
In an attempt to gain a deeper understanding of the effects of Cold War culture on John Updike\u27s ...
This thesis aims towards a revitalisation and reformulation of reader-response theory, focusing on t...
Literature is the reflection of life or society. Whatever is going on in the society it reflects all...
Although Updike has been recognized as one of the few contemporary writers worthy of serious conside...
Jane Eyre (1847) is a multidimensional novel in which many different interpretations are blended tog...
This thesis explores the approach to death in the novels of John Updike published in the 1960's, nam...
This thesis is a scholarly examination of John Updike’s first two novels of the Rabbit saga: Rabbit,...
The aim of Text and Reader is to find a critical approach that links a novel\u27s form to its socio-...
My dissertation explores two critical points in understanding John Updike\u27s recent career. First,...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
In “Resisting the Reader: Textual Recalcitrance in British Novels, 1917-2011,” I focus on a radical,...
John Updike’s use of setting in his fiction has elicited different and even conflicting reactions fr...