Christine Brooke-Rose's Thru is a strikingly provocative postmodernist text. Instead of examining how Thru deconstructs fiction through the literary and linguistic theory that it includes, this essay looks at how theory—specifically Roman Jakobson's diagram of communication—is altered within the context of fiction. The analysis considers the mechanisms through which criticism differentiates itself from reading and how Thru manages to expose such distinctions. I foreground the text's disrupted graphic surface in order to suggest that this may be the basis for the pragmatic reader to gain the advantage over the critic in achieving a productive view of this complex text
(print) ix, 254 p. ; 24 cm.The unbearable lightness of being : a preface -- The specter as sign : gh...
In “Resisting the Reader: Textual Recalcitrance in British Novels, 1917-2011,” I focus on a radical,...
This essay surveys literary criticism at the intersection of narrative theory and the Victorian nove...
Christine Brooke-Rose's Thru is a strikingly provocative postmodernist text. Instead of examining ho...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, taki...
This essay explores the experimental nature of Christine Brooke-Rose’s narrative Thru and its attem...
The founding of the Christine Brooke-Rose Society and its inaugural event prompted me to revisit my ...
This thesis examines the novels of Christine Brooke-Rose and A. S. Byatt in order to question the ex...
My thesis engages with reader-response theory in order to show how the realisations it makes might b...
This dissertation argues that postmodernism is more usefully conceived of as a practice of reading t...
The article analyzes the enrichment of the reception frame of I. Murdoch's oeuvre due to the complem...
By examining A. S. Byatt’s Possession, we can see that Byatt is showing the limitations of postmoder...
The postmodernity of A. S. Byatt’s Booker Prize-winning novel Possession (1990) has been much discus...
My thesis engages with reader-response theory in order to show how the realisations it makes might b...
(print) ix, 254 p. ; 24 cm.The unbearable lightness of being : a preface -- The specter as sign : gh...
In “Resisting the Reader: Textual Recalcitrance in British Novels, 1917-2011,” I focus on a radical,...
This essay surveys literary criticism at the intersection of narrative theory and the Victorian nove...
Christine Brooke-Rose's Thru is a strikingly provocative postmodernist text. Instead of examining ho...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, taki...
This essay explores the experimental nature of Christine Brooke-Rose’s narrative Thru and its attem...
The founding of the Christine Brooke-Rose Society and its inaugural event prompted me to revisit my ...
This thesis examines the novels of Christine Brooke-Rose and A. S. Byatt in order to question the ex...
My thesis engages with reader-response theory in order to show how the realisations it makes might b...
This dissertation argues that postmodernism is more usefully conceived of as a practice of reading t...
The article analyzes the enrichment of the reception frame of I. Murdoch's oeuvre due to the complem...
By examining A. S. Byatt’s Possession, we can see that Byatt is showing the limitations of postmoder...
The postmodernity of A. S. Byatt’s Booker Prize-winning novel Possession (1990) has been much discus...
My thesis engages with reader-response theory in order to show how the realisations it makes might b...
(print) ix, 254 p. ; 24 cm.The unbearable lightness of being : a preface -- The specter as sign : gh...
In “Resisting the Reader: Textual Recalcitrance in British Novels, 1917-2011,” I focus on a radical,...
This essay surveys literary criticism at the intersection of narrative theory and the Victorian nove...