This article considers two metafictional academic novels from the reader’s point of view. It argues that this critical vantage point is suggested (if not imposed) by the fictional texts themselves. The theoretical texts informing this reading pertain either to reader response or to theories of metafiction, in an attempt to uncover conceptual commonalities between the two. Apart from a thematic focus on academic conferences as pilgrimages and the advocacy of reading as an ethically valuable activity, the two novels also share a propensity for intertextuality, a blurring of the boundaries between fictional and critical discourse, as well as a questioning of the borderline between fiction and reality. The reading of fiction is paralleled to th...
The texts of both novels are characterized by a notable lack of the narrator figure, which would hav...
In this Paper, Peter Rabinowitz and Michael Smith's Authorizing Readers (1997) was considered as a f...
The paper tries to deal with a relationship between theory and fiction. Reading David Lodge academic...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
In contemporary narratives, the literary representations of reading and hermeneutics question the po...
Les théories et pensées de la lecture ont, au tournant du XXIe siècle, valorisé des approches pragma...
Through a focused exploration of “experimental” novels by Raymond Queneau, Claude Simon, and Alain R...
Comprising a novel and complementary discourses, this thesis blurs the traditional distinctions betw...
How can theories of narrative account for experimental texts that are “irreducibly diverse”? This th...
One of the prominent characteristics of contemporary literature is its assimilation to critical disc...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...
Following the research led by Annie Collovald and Erik Neveu on the reading of detective novels, and...
This dissertation examines the growth and practice of two distinct reading techniques, with referenc...
Traditionally realistic novels, expected to mirror reality, acted as modals for creating and establi...
The subject of this text are metafictional elements in the novels Nišan (2007) by Blaže Minevski and...
The texts of both novels are characterized by a notable lack of the narrator figure, which would hav...
In this Paper, Peter Rabinowitz and Michael Smith's Authorizing Readers (1997) was considered as a f...
The paper tries to deal with a relationship between theory and fiction. Reading David Lodge academic...
This thesis focuses on the mature development of Christine Brooke-Rose’s experimental fiction, takin...
In contemporary narratives, the literary representations of reading and hermeneutics question the po...
Les théories et pensées de la lecture ont, au tournant du XXIe siècle, valorisé des approches pragma...
Through a focused exploration of “experimental” novels by Raymond Queneau, Claude Simon, and Alain R...
Comprising a novel and complementary discourses, this thesis blurs the traditional distinctions betw...
How can theories of narrative account for experimental texts that are “irreducibly diverse”? This th...
One of the prominent characteristics of contemporary literature is its assimilation to critical disc...
grantor: University of TorontoThis inquiry examines some of the ways in which a woman read...
Following the research led by Annie Collovald and Erik Neveu on the reading of detective novels, and...
This dissertation examines the growth and practice of two distinct reading techniques, with referenc...
Traditionally realistic novels, expected to mirror reality, acted as modals for creating and establi...
The subject of this text are metafictional elements in the novels Nišan (2007) by Blaže Minevski and...
The texts of both novels are characterized by a notable lack of the narrator figure, which would hav...
In this Paper, Peter Rabinowitz and Michael Smith's Authorizing Readers (1997) was considered as a f...
The paper tries to deal with a relationship between theory and fiction. Reading David Lodge academic...