In 1843, a 16-year-old Canadian housemaid named Grace Marks was tried for the murder of her employer and his mistress. The jury delivered a guilty verdict and the trial made headlines throughout the world. Nevertheless, opinion remained resolutely divided about Marks in terms of considering her a scorned woman who had taken out her rage on two, innocent victims, or an unwitting victim herself, implicated in a crime she was too young to understand. In 1996 Canadian author Margaret Atwood reconstructs Grace’s story in her novel Alias Grace. Our analysis probes the story of Grace Marks as it appears in the Canadian television miniseries Alias Grace, consisting of 6 episodes, directed by Mary Harron and based on Margaret Atwood’s novel, adapted...
Margaret Atwood depicts life memory as a process, a journey into one’s self that results in self-rea...
This study attempts to examine how gender roles appear in the adaption of Margaret Atwood’s publishe...
In this article, we take a novel approach to analysing English sentencing remarks in cases of women ...
In 1843, a 16-year-old Canadian housemaid named Grace Marks was tried for the murder of her employer...
In her ninth novel, Alias Grace, Margaret Atwood shifts her perspective on the Canadian past and rec...
In this paper, I analyze Margaret Atwood’s biographical novel Alias Grace which is based on the life...
In this paper, I analyze Margaret Atwood’s biographical novel Alias Grace which is based on the life...
Grace Marks was a convicted double murderer in nineteenth-century Canada. Her case was well known at...
Margaret Atwood's Alias Grace brims with references to the act of narration. Private and public narr...
Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace rewrites Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. Both Grace Marks an...
This analysis of Margaret Atwood's appropriation of history is limited to two of her works, The Hand...
Bibliography: leaves 53.In the Introduction of this minor dissertation, Margaret Atwood as a post-mo...
Postmodern fiction demonstrates a suspicion about the narrative status of history. Arguably, its pro...
The central tenet of the study is that language and madness are bound together, language both inclu...
Margaret Atwood's novel Alias Grace, by exploring the story of Grace Marks through an authorial mosa...
Margaret Atwood depicts life memory as a process, a journey into one’s self that results in self-rea...
This study attempts to examine how gender roles appear in the adaption of Margaret Atwood’s publishe...
In this article, we take a novel approach to analysing English sentencing remarks in cases of women ...
In 1843, a 16-year-old Canadian housemaid named Grace Marks was tried for the murder of her employer...
In her ninth novel, Alias Grace, Margaret Atwood shifts her perspective on the Canadian past and rec...
In this paper, I analyze Margaret Atwood’s biographical novel Alias Grace which is based on the life...
In this paper, I analyze Margaret Atwood’s biographical novel Alias Grace which is based on the life...
Grace Marks was a convicted double murderer in nineteenth-century Canada. Her case was well known at...
Margaret Atwood's Alias Grace brims with references to the act of narration. Private and public narr...
Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace rewrites Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. Both Grace Marks an...
This analysis of Margaret Atwood's appropriation of history is limited to two of her works, The Hand...
Bibliography: leaves 53.In the Introduction of this minor dissertation, Margaret Atwood as a post-mo...
Postmodern fiction demonstrates a suspicion about the narrative status of history. Arguably, its pro...
The central tenet of the study is that language and madness are bound together, language both inclu...
Margaret Atwood's novel Alias Grace, by exploring the story of Grace Marks through an authorial mosa...
Margaret Atwood depicts life memory as a process, a journey into one’s self that results in self-rea...
This study attempts to examine how gender roles appear in the adaption of Margaret Atwood’s publishe...
In this article, we take a novel approach to analysing English sentencing remarks in cases of women ...