The article examines critical responses to Styron’s controversial novel Sophie’s Choice, and argues that precisely those aspects of the novel that have been the most severely criticized - the sudden changes in narrative technique, the mixing of different genres, the parallels between Poland and America, the comparisons between a slave plantation and a concentration camp, as well as the use of atypical characters – are exactly what makes the novel powerful. Those "faults" serve a universalizing function. The strength of the novel, and its lasting impact, stem from the fact that it is ultimately a moral book
The article analyzes the smells and scents in the novel “Sophie’s Choice” by W. Styron, their influe...
I discuss the treatment of Jews in this novel, and speculate that if, as seems probable, Dr Czinner ...
This article attempts to show how certain figures of the feminine in Walter Benjamin’s work sketch o...
Sophie's Choice (1979), William Styron's autobiographical novel, deals, like his other works, with t...
This article examines how Styron shapes Sophie\u27s Choice through Southern Gothic literary techniqu...
Sophie's Choice (1979), William Styron's autobiographical novel, deals, like his other works, with t...
This article analyses critical responses to William Styron’s "The Confessions of Nat Turner", claimi...
William Styron\u27s Confessions of Nat Turner depicts a fictitious characterization of the historica...
The Holocaust was one of the most horrible periods in human history as during the years of the Secon...
In 1967, the American novelist William Styron published his third major work of fiction, a book enti...
This paper presents an opportunity for the uncertainty that has plagued the novel's criticism to app...
The controversy surrounding William Styron\u27s 1967 novel, The Confessions of Nat Turner, is compli...
In her article "Roth's The Counterlife and the Negotiation of Reality and Fiction" Pia Masiero analy...
This article applies the research of French psychiatrist Muriel Salmona to literary analysis of Stie...
This book draws on positioning theory and systemic psychology to establish a new way of thinking abo...
The article analyzes the smells and scents in the novel “Sophie’s Choice” by W. Styron, their influe...
I discuss the treatment of Jews in this novel, and speculate that if, as seems probable, Dr Czinner ...
This article attempts to show how certain figures of the feminine in Walter Benjamin’s work sketch o...
Sophie's Choice (1979), William Styron's autobiographical novel, deals, like his other works, with t...
This article examines how Styron shapes Sophie\u27s Choice through Southern Gothic literary techniqu...
Sophie's Choice (1979), William Styron's autobiographical novel, deals, like his other works, with t...
This article analyses critical responses to William Styron’s "The Confessions of Nat Turner", claimi...
William Styron\u27s Confessions of Nat Turner depicts a fictitious characterization of the historica...
The Holocaust was one of the most horrible periods in human history as during the years of the Secon...
In 1967, the American novelist William Styron published his third major work of fiction, a book enti...
This paper presents an opportunity for the uncertainty that has plagued the novel's criticism to app...
The controversy surrounding William Styron\u27s 1967 novel, The Confessions of Nat Turner, is compli...
In her article "Roth's The Counterlife and the Negotiation of Reality and Fiction" Pia Masiero analy...
This article applies the research of French psychiatrist Muriel Salmona to literary analysis of Stie...
This book draws on positioning theory and systemic psychology to establish a new way of thinking abo...
The article analyzes the smells and scents in the novel “Sophie’s Choice” by W. Styron, their influe...
I discuss the treatment of Jews in this novel, and speculate that if, as seems probable, Dr Czinner ...
This article attempts to show how certain figures of the feminine in Walter Benjamin’s work sketch o...