An introduction to a special focus in the Journal of Postcolonial Writing of three articles on the works of Janet Frame, to mark the tenth year of her death in 2004. The introduction and editing of the articles were both undertaken by myself
'Editor's note' with Janet Wilson introducing issue 49:1 of the 'Journal of Postcolonial Writing
Frequently referred to as New Zealand’s most famous and least public author, Janet Frame occupies a ...
This is a bumper issue of the journal with ten articles on a variety of topics and approaches. It be...
An introduction to a special focus in the Journal of Postcolonial Writing of three articles on the w...
Over the years the work of Janet Frame has been subjected to appraisal and appropriation by critics ...
Art and the initiation of the artist into the skills of her craft, along with the fiction making hab...
International audienceThis essay proposes to analyse the way Janet Frame defamiliarises the conventi...
This paper deals with two short stories written by the New Zealand born writer Janet Frame both of w...
The article reviews and analysis the novel 'The Edge of the Alphabet' by New Zealand author, Janet F...
Patricia Neville’s Janet Frame’s World of Books is a fascinating study of Frame’s world of words, bo...
“Keel and Kool”, the first of Frame’s short stories in The Lagoon, is the fictionalized version of h...
The reading habits of an author are always of interest, and in the case of Janet Frame, notoriously ...
Janet Frame travelled abroad on numerous occasions during her life, as a much-needed cathartic exper...
New Zealand author Janet Frame was initially diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1945, during her stay i...
The article is an analysis of a three-volume autobiography of a New Zealand writer, Janet Frame (192...
'Editor's note' with Janet Wilson introducing issue 49:1 of the 'Journal of Postcolonial Writing
Frequently referred to as New Zealand’s most famous and least public author, Janet Frame occupies a ...
This is a bumper issue of the journal with ten articles on a variety of topics and approaches. It be...
An introduction to a special focus in the Journal of Postcolonial Writing of three articles on the w...
Over the years the work of Janet Frame has been subjected to appraisal and appropriation by critics ...
Art and the initiation of the artist into the skills of her craft, along with the fiction making hab...
International audienceThis essay proposes to analyse the way Janet Frame defamiliarises the conventi...
This paper deals with two short stories written by the New Zealand born writer Janet Frame both of w...
The article reviews and analysis the novel 'The Edge of the Alphabet' by New Zealand author, Janet F...
Patricia Neville’s Janet Frame’s World of Books is a fascinating study of Frame’s world of words, bo...
“Keel and Kool”, the first of Frame’s short stories in The Lagoon, is the fictionalized version of h...
The reading habits of an author are always of interest, and in the case of Janet Frame, notoriously ...
Janet Frame travelled abroad on numerous occasions during her life, as a much-needed cathartic exper...
New Zealand author Janet Frame was initially diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1945, during her stay i...
The article is an analysis of a three-volume autobiography of a New Zealand writer, Janet Frame (192...
'Editor's note' with Janet Wilson introducing issue 49:1 of the 'Journal of Postcolonial Writing
Frequently referred to as New Zealand’s most famous and least public author, Janet Frame occupies a ...
This is a bumper issue of the journal with ten articles on a variety of topics and approaches. It be...