Showing 1 - 11 results of 11 for search 'autobiographical novel', query time: 0.08s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Autobiographical Memory Disturbances in Depression: A Novel Therapeutic Target? by Cristiano A. Köhler, André F. Carvalho, Gilberto S. Alves, Roger S. McIntyre, Thomas N. Hyphantis, Martín Cammarota

    Published 2015-01-01
    “…We propose that the manipulation of the reconsolidation of autobiographical memories in depression might represent a novel yet largely unexplored, domain-specific, therapeutic opportunity for depression treatment.…”
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  2. 2

    The Fake Diary of a Historical Figure: Klementyna Tańska-Hoffmanowa’s Journal of Countess Françoise Krasińska (1825) by Magdalena Ożarska

    Published 2016-03-01
    “… This paper discusses a somewhat forgotten diary novel by the first Polish woman writer and educator to make a living from creative writing, Klementyna Tańska-Hoffmanowa (1798–1845). …”
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  3. 3

    Newman et la conscience dans son roman Callista et dans son sermon « Ce qui dispose à la foi » by Michel Durand

    Published 2009-12-01
    “…The ‘astonishing variety of literary genres’ to which Newman turned his hand must not blind us to the underlying unity of all his work. His two novels are thus not mere diversions but form an integral part of his overall vision. …”
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  4. 4

    Language in Flight: Memorial, Narrative and History in David Copperfield by Cathy Caruth

    Published 2017-03-01
    “…Yet if the novel thus dramatizes how traumatic origins can be represented in writing, it also asks what it means for autobiographical language to originate in a trauma. …”
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  5. 5

    Figures de l’exil dans New Grub Street de George Gissing by Christine Huguet

    Published 2008-12-01
    “…In New Grub Street, Gissing’s acknowledged masterpiece combining autobiographical resonances with an insider’s dissection of the contemporary literary scene, estrangement is raised to the level of systematised exile, it is monopolised and articulated as a logical predicate.This paper will look at Gissing’s comprehensive vertical exploration of the concepts of belonging and exclusion in this 1891 novel which, being deeply rooted in material and metaphysical uprooting, tremulously urges the paradox of exile at home.…”
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  6. 6

    La constellation comme pratique créatrice chez Virginia Woolf et Annie Ernaux by Suzel Meyer

    Published 2022-07-01
    “…The Years (1937), a novel by Virginia Woolf, and Les Années (2008), a non-fiction book by Annie Ernaux, are two ways of a feminine writing of history, written by and through the mind and experience of particular women. …”
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  7. 7

    Le récit de vie comme trajectoire. Une comparaison des (auto)biographies de Jean Paul et de Stendhal by Aurélie Moioli

    Published 2014-05-01
    “…It represents a narrative’s possible junction : the desired novel is the absent center that generates the autobiographical writing. …”
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  8. 8

    « This narrative is my written memory » : transcrire la mémoire dans David Copperfield de Charles Dickens by Céline Prest

    Published 2015-10-01
    “…Anticipating Marcel Proust’s autobiographical masterpiece, David is in search of lost time. …”
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  9. 9

    B.S. Johnson ou l’équilibre de l’écart by Vanessa Guignery

    Published 2011-12-01
    “…This paper proposes to examine the apparent contradiction in B.S. Johnson’s novels between, on the one hand, the defamiliarisation of devices so as to lay bare all fictional effects and underline the distance between the referent and its graphic inscription, and on the other hand, the implementation of innovative formal strategies meant to reflect reality as faithfully as possible. …”
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  10. 10

    ‘Queer Reverence’: Aubrey Beardsley’s Venus and Tannhäuser by Nicole Fluhr

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…My analysis focuses on its rejection of the source legend’s central themes of guilt and redemption, both of which are not only absent from but unimaginable in the world of the novel. In both its published and draft forms, Beardsley’s narrative depicts only Venus’s realm. …”
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  11. 11

     Jack Kerouac’s Ecopoetics in The Dharma Bums and Desolation Angels : Domesticity, Wilderness and Masculine Fantasies of Animality by Pierre-Antoine Pellerin

    Published 2012-05-01
    “…Throughout his autobiographical cycle of fourteen novels, Jack Kerouac tried to present his narrator and his protagonists as archetypes of American masculinity who fought against their perceived domestication in a society which they characterized as undergoing feminization. …”
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