This study seeks to rectify some of the prevailing misconceptions about the nature of John Barth' s fiction by offering a comprehensive analysis of his fourth novel, Giles Goat-Boy (1966). The study delineates two dialectics that together create the paradoxical tensions of Barth's work. The first operates between metaphor, which seeks and affirms patterns in language, and irony, which invokes metaphor in order to deny its validity; the second operates within metaphor, between metafiction, which self-reflexively examines language and fiction, and metaphysics, which focuses attention on man and his universe. Contrary to established critical opinion on Barth, which tends to stress the role played by irony in his work, this study argues that Ba...
The Sot-Weed Factor is widely considered the first and greatest postmodern novel. In a satirical ro...
This research which is entitled “Ironi dalam Novel Paper Towns, Karya John Green.” focuses on the ty...
This thesis studies the literary exhaustion and its possible replenishment in Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaugh...
This thesis investigates John Barth's esthetic concern with literary tradition, with the manipulatio...
The present study aims at elaborating on the connection between two concepts in the field of litera...
This thesis has explored the theme of Productive Unity in John Barth’s novel, Giles Goat – Boy. Pro...
Program year: 1985/1986Digitized from print original stored in HDRThe way John Barth's characters tr...
This article deals with Roland Barthes’ mythological thinking and its methodological implication in ...
This study of the development of a postmodernist aesthetics in the novels of John Barth from The Flo...
Orientador : Brunilda Tempel ReichmannDissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal do Paraná. Setor...
This paper seeks to discern the narratological aspects of John Barth's famous essay titled “Literatu...
As the title of this thesis indicates, this work is a study of key psychoanalytic issues deemed to b...
Barth's characters experience the intimate inhumanity of their physical nature in a context of disin...
This thesis explores the reaction against realism in the work of three contemporary American novelis...
The parody of the eighteenth century novel and its foundling hero in The Sot-Weed Factor (1960), the...
The Sot-Weed Factor is widely considered the first and greatest postmodern novel. In a satirical ro...
This research which is entitled “Ironi dalam Novel Paper Towns, Karya John Green.” focuses on the ty...
This thesis studies the literary exhaustion and its possible replenishment in Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaugh...
This thesis investigates John Barth's esthetic concern with literary tradition, with the manipulatio...
The present study aims at elaborating on the connection between two concepts in the field of litera...
This thesis has explored the theme of Productive Unity in John Barth’s novel, Giles Goat – Boy. Pro...
Program year: 1985/1986Digitized from print original stored in HDRThe way John Barth's characters tr...
This article deals with Roland Barthes’ mythological thinking and its methodological implication in ...
This study of the development of a postmodernist aesthetics in the novels of John Barth from The Flo...
Orientador : Brunilda Tempel ReichmannDissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal do Paraná. Setor...
This paper seeks to discern the narratological aspects of John Barth's famous essay titled “Literatu...
As the title of this thesis indicates, this work is a study of key psychoanalytic issues deemed to b...
Barth's characters experience the intimate inhumanity of their physical nature in a context of disin...
This thesis explores the reaction against realism in the work of three contemporary American novelis...
The parody of the eighteenth century novel and its foundling hero in The Sot-Weed Factor (1960), the...
The Sot-Weed Factor is widely considered the first and greatest postmodern novel. In a satirical ro...
This research which is entitled “Ironi dalam Novel Paper Towns, Karya John Green.” focuses on the ty...
This thesis studies the literary exhaustion and its possible replenishment in Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaugh...