Since his debut as a poet, Paul Auster has pursued his metaphysical investigations in a semiotic world where signs are everywhere to be read, where doubts about authenticity and forgery are ubiquitous. In The Brooklyn Follies (2005), the multiplicity of originals and facsimiles, the silence/speech duality and the architectural metaphors lead to the final vision of the attacks on the World Trade Center. As the reminiscences of the confusio linguarum contribute to the novel’s plot, Paul Auster represents 9/11 “obliquely” and reaffirms the role of language and the imagination in the rebuilding of truth
Ghosts, the second novel in Paul Auster’s The New York Trilogy, can be read as a fictionalized theor...
This article traces Paul Auster’s shift in sensibility after the 2001 attacks on the World Trade Cen...
In the work of Paul Auster (Newark, 1947 - ), we find two main themes: the sense of loss and existen...
Oracle Night is a labyrinthine collection of scattered narratives. The main character, Sidney Orr, b...
Paul Auster’s writing testifies to the events of 9/11 in unexpected ways, through silence, repetitio...
"Paul Auster" provides the first extended analysis of Auster's essays, poetry, fiction, films and co...
We present a reading of The New York Trilogy (1987), Leviathan (1992) and The Brooklyn Follies (2005...
Entre autobiographie et fiction, le terme « autofiction », inventé par Serge Doubrovsky, est un « ge...
"The Invention of Illusions: International Perspectives on Paul Auster" is a collection of essays on...
Leviathan refers to the State (as defined by Hobbes) and its symbol in the USA, the Statue of Libert...
It is concentrated in the examination of the enunciative engendering used by the American writer Pau...
Ever since the publication of his first novel in 1985, Paul Auster has come to be considered one of ...
Paul Auster has been a prolific writer of poetry, memoir, essays and novels since the 1970s. The Inv...
Nas três narrativas que constituem The New York Trilogy – City of Glass, Ghosts e The Locked Room – ...
In Moon Palace, Paul Auster « lets the story be » and does not allow his text to be submitted to any...
Ghosts, the second novel in Paul Auster’s The New York Trilogy, can be read as a fictionalized theor...
This article traces Paul Auster’s shift in sensibility after the 2001 attacks on the World Trade Cen...
In the work of Paul Auster (Newark, 1947 - ), we find two main themes: the sense of loss and existen...
Oracle Night is a labyrinthine collection of scattered narratives. The main character, Sidney Orr, b...
Paul Auster’s writing testifies to the events of 9/11 in unexpected ways, through silence, repetitio...
"Paul Auster" provides the first extended analysis of Auster's essays, poetry, fiction, films and co...
We present a reading of The New York Trilogy (1987), Leviathan (1992) and The Brooklyn Follies (2005...
Entre autobiographie et fiction, le terme « autofiction », inventé par Serge Doubrovsky, est un « ge...
"The Invention of Illusions: International Perspectives on Paul Auster" is a collection of essays on...
Leviathan refers to the State (as defined by Hobbes) and its symbol in the USA, the Statue of Libert...
It is concentrated in the examination of the enunciative engendering used by the American writer Pau...
Ever since the publication of his first novel in 1985, Paul Auster has come to be considered one of ...
Paul Auster has been a prolific writer of poetry, memoir, essays and novels since the 1970s. The Inv...
Nas três narrativas que constituem The New York Trilogy – City of Glass, Ghosts e The Locked Room – ...
In Moon Palace, Paul Auster « lets the story be » and does not allow his text to be submitted to any...
Ghosts, the second novel in Paul Auster’s The New York Trilogy, can be read as a fictionalized theor...
This article traces Paul Auster’s shift in sensibility after the 2001 attacks on the World Trade Cen...
In the work of Paul Auster (Newark, 1947 - ), we find two main themes: the sense of loss and existen...