Brian Castro’s Blindness and Rage: A Phantasmagoria is a verse novel published in 2017 and the unlikely winner of a Prime Minister’s Award in 2018. This article concentrates on the role of France and French referents in the text, showing that they embody a literary, transnational cosmopolitanism that the text at once hails and critiques. Beneath the gaudy and flashy serve of the novel\u27s erudite sheen, a self-questioning or even self-vexation occurs, where the text gets in the way of itself. By ironizing its protagonist, Lucien Gracq, and presenting the alternate personas of Catherine Bourgeois and the Dogman, and examining the realization that Gracq’s writerly quest is also a propulsion toward his own demise, we see that the text’s liter...
Brian Castro, écrivain australien contemporain d’origine chinoise, auteur de dix romans, a été souve...
International audienceThis article endeavours to explore the stakes and modalities of the fictional ...
This article discusses the influence of Paul de Man’s critical theories on John Banville’s most rece...
International audienceThis article aims to question the complex interaction between aesthetics and i...
International audienceThis article aims to question the complex interaction between aesthetics and i...
Australian writer Brian Castro is the author of ten novels, among which Birds of Passage (1989), Aft...
This essay looks at the significance of the semblable, the figure of the double or likeness, which B...
Australian writer Brian Castro is the author of ten novels, among which Birds of Passage (1989), Aft...
This is chapter 5 of the book Colum McCann and the Aesthetics of Redemption.Introducing the work of...
International audienceThis article identifies allusions to the works and life of Blaise Pascal in Sa...
This article explores the conte urbain as practiced by Yvan Bienvenue, winner of the Governor Genera...
The article examines the function of ludic poetics and the role of aphorisms in the novels by Crébil...
This article studies the work of French contemporary writer Éric Chevillard, in an attempt to identi...
This article discusses the autofictional "I" as the undisputed mediator of the author's ego meanders...
This article discusses the autofictional "I" as the undisputed mediator of the author's ego meanders...
Brian Castro, écrivain australien contemporain d’origine chinoise, auteur de dix romans, a été souve...
International audienceThis article endeavours to explore the stakes and modalities of the fictional ...
This article discusses the influence of Paul de Man’s critical theories on John Banville’s most rece...
International audienceThis article aims to question the complex interaction between aesthetics and i...
International audienceThis article aims to question the complex interaction between aesthetics and i...
Australian writer Brian Castro is the author of ten novels, among which Birds of Passage (1989), Aft...
This essay looks at the significance of the semblable, the figure of the double or likeness, which B...
Australian writer Brian Castro is the author of ten novels, among which Birds of Passage (1989), Aft...
This is chapter 5 of the book Colum McCann and the Aesthetics of Redemption.Introducing the work of...
International audienceThis article identifies allusions to the works and life of Blaise Pascal in Sa...
This article explores the conte urbain as practiced by Yvan Bienvenue, winner of the Governor Genera...
The article examines the function of ludic poetics and the role of aphorisms in the novels by Crébil...
This article studies the work of French contemporary writer Éric Chevillard, in an attempt to identi...
This article discusses the autofictional "I" as the undisputed mediator of the author's ego meanders...
This article discusses the autofictional "I" as the undisputed mediator of the author's ego meanders...
Brian Castro, écrivain australien contemporain d’origine chinoise, auteur de dix romans, a été souve...
International audienceThis article endeavours to explore the stakes and modalities of the fictional ...
This article discusses the influence of Paul de Man’s critical theories on John Banville’s most rece...