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I The difficulty with a novel , such as Jane Eyre , is not only the omnipresence of the I - narrator , Jane , but particularly her unceasing appeal to the reader for approval . Jane Eyre does not content herself with telling the story ...
I The difficulty with a novel , such as Jane Eyre , is not only the omnipresence of the I - narrator , Jane , but particularly her unceasing appeal to the reader for approval . Jane Eyre does not content herself with telling the story ...
Página 5
What is probably more radical , one can conversely sense in these recurrent appeals to the reader traces of anxiety that would follow from the reader's refusal to be persuaded . In other words , the style of the narrative with its ...
What is probably more radical , one can conversely sense in these recurrent appeals to the reader traces of anxiety that would follow from the reader's refusal to be persuaded . In other words , the style of the narrative with its ...
Página 33
There is no " objective ” narrator that organises the different individual discourses , by leading the reader from one voice to the other , or bridging the information gaps in the utterly fragmented structure .
There is no " objective ” narrator that organises the different individual discourses , by leading the reader from one voice to the other , or bridging the information gaps in the utterly fragmented structure .
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THE ATLANTIC LITERARY REVIEW | 1 |
Ana Bringas | 24 |
Paula GarcíaRamirez | 42 |
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