This essay probes into the neglected aspects of Jeanette Winterson’s writing by reflecting on what she proclaims to be a “new exploration” of fictional possibilities from Lighthousekeeping onwards. Focusing on her later fiction—Lighthousekeeping, Weight, The Stone Gods and Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?—I examine her writing as a complex narrative system that perpetually reworks novelistic space to perfect the art of ellipsis; the process of which crumbles the epistemological foundations of grand narratives and culminates a state of imagined weightlessness which liberates her characters (as well as her readers) from earthbound knowledge. I also illustrate how the author’s focus in her later fiction is predicated on her desire for in...
“Knotting up the Cat’s Cradle: Exploring Time and Space in Winterson’s Novels”, puts an emphasis on ...
This essay considers the relation between the queer and the uncanny, and in particular the uncanny a...
The last few decades have witnessed an interesting new dimension in creative writing as a number of ...
This essay probes into the neglected aspects of Jeanette Winterson’s writing by reflecting on what s...
Jeanette Winterson’s Oranges are Not the Only Fruit (1985), Written on the Body (1992), and The Ston...
(EN) Stories in Jeanette Winterson's novels have a dual function: on the one hand, canonical narrati...
Almost all of Jeanette Winterson\u2019s novels are written in first person, in most cases a person n...
Almost all of Jeanette Winterson’s novels are written in first person, in most cases a person narrat...
Jeanette Winterson creates a specific language and world in her novels, a world that is between fic...
In Jeanette Winterson’s fiction story-telling and tales have an important role. Her protagonists ar...
This article examines Jeanette Winterson's novels to show how storytelling can hold transformative p...
International audienceIn Art Objects (1995), her aesthetic manifesto, Jeanette Winterson calls for a...
This thesis derives from my interest in the way in which we read and understand novels. We may not c...
Jeanette Winterson’s novel The Gap of Time, a re-writing of Shake¬speare’s romance The Winter’s Tale...
This thesis investigates acts of ‘re-telling’ in four selected novels by Jeanette Winterson and Alan...
“Knotting up the Cat’s Cradle: Exploring Time and Space in Winterson’s Novels”, puts an emphasis on ...
This essay considers the relation between the queer and the uncanny, and in particular the uncanny a...
The last few decades have witnessed an interesting new dimension in creative writing as a number of ...
This essay probes into the neglected aspects of Jeanette Winterson’s writing by reflecting on what s...
Jeanette Winterson’s Oranges are Not the Only Fruit (1985), Written on the Body (1992), and The Ston...
(EN) Stories in Jeanette Winterson's novels have a dual function: on the one hand, canonical narrati...
Almost all of Jeanette Winterson\u2019s novels are written in first person, in most cases a person n...
Almost all of Jeanette Winterson’s novels are written in first person, in most cases a person narrat...
Jeanette Winterson creates a specific language and world in her novels, a world that is between fic...
In Jeanette Winterson’s fiction story-telling and tales have an important role. Her protagonists ar...
This article examines Jeanette Winterson's novels to show how storytelling can hold transformative p...
International audienceIn Art Objects (1995), her aesthetic manifesto, Jeanette Winterson calls for a...
This thesis derives from my interest in the way in which we read and understand novels. We may not c...
Jeanette Winterson’s novel The Gap of Time, a re-writing of Shake¬speare’s romance The Winter’s Tale...
This thesis investigates acts of ‘re-telling’ in four selected novels by Jeanette Winterson and Alan...
“Knotting up the Cat’s Cradle: Exploring Time and Space in Winterson’s Novels”, puts an emphasis on ...
This essay considers the relation between the queer and the uncanny, and in particular the uncanny a...
The last few decades have witnessed an interesting new dimension in creative writing as a number of ...