Changes in identity in Alice Munro’s stories: a sociopsychological analysis

Alice Munro’s winning of the 2013 Nobel Prize for literature was a surprise only in the sense that no one who writes only short stories has ever won it before. Otherwise, among writers and literary specialists she has long been considered a leading candidate, as she is one of the masters of this com...

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Main Author: Milda Danytė
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Vilnius University 2015-05-01
Series:Literatūra (Vilnius)
Online Access:http://www.journals.vu.lt/literatura/article/view/7692
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spelling doaj-9d49cc8379e948d69fca499c1f9369012020-11-24T21:25:15ZdeuVilnius University Literatūra (Vilnius)0258-08021648-11432015-05-0156410.15388/Litera.2014.4.7692Changes in identity in Alice Munro’s stories: a sociopsychological analysisMilda DanytėAlice Munro’s winning of the 2013 Nobel Prize for literature was a surprise only in the sense that no one who writes only short stories has ever won it before. Otherwise, among writers and literary specialists she has long been considered a leading candidate, as she is one of the masters of this complex literary genre, known especially for her probing into the small-town communities of the southern part of the province of Ontario. This is an Anglo-Celtic (English, Scottish, and Irish) society which formed through waves of immigration from the early 19th century as a farmland interspersed with small towns. These apparently dull communities are, as Munro reveals, rich in subtle class distinctions and spoken and unspoken social norms of behavior. Munro has explained how she only gradually understood the richness of the material that her home country had given her, “full of events and emotions and amazing things going on all the time”.http://www.journals.vu.lt/literatura/article/view/7692
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Milda Danytė
spellingShingle Milda Danytė
Changes in identity in Alice Munro’s stories: a sociopsychological analysis
Literatūra (Vilnius)
author_facet Milda Danytė
author_sort Milda Danytė
title Changes in identity in Alice Munro’s stories: a sociopsychological analysis
title_short Changes in identity in Alice Munro’s stories: a sociopsychological analysis
title_full Changes in identity in Alice Munro’s stories: a sociopsychological analysis
title_fullStr Changes in identity in Alice Munro’s stories: a sociopsychological analysis
title_full_unstemmed Changes in identity in Alice Munro’s stories: a sociopsychological analysis
title_sort changes in identity in alice munro’s stories: a sociopsychological analysis
publisher Vilnius University
series Literatūra (Vilnius)
issn 0258-0802
1648-1143
publishDate 2015-05-01
description Alice Munro’s winning of the 2013 Nobel Prize for literature was a surprise only in the sense that no one who writes only short stories has ever won it before. Otherwise, among writers and literary specialists she has long been considered a leading candidate, as she is one of the masters of this complex literary genre, known especially for her probing into the small-town communities of the southern part of the province of Ontario. This is an Anglo-Celtic (English, Scottish, and Irish) society which formed through waves of immigration from the early 19th century as a farmland interspersed with small towns. These apparently dull communities are, as Munro reveals, rich in subtle class distinctions and spoken and unspoken social norms of behavior. Munro has explained how she only gradually understood the richness of the material that her home country had given her, “full of events and emotions and amazing things going on all the time”.
url http://www.journals.vu.lt/literatura/article/view/7692
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