Too Strange for Reality, Too Real for Fairy Tales
In “A Stone Woman” (2003), A.S. Byatt centres the story of her protagonist’s fantastic metamorphosis around the continuities between the transformations involving the body and those affecting the mind. In this light, her narrative constitutes a fictional exploration of cognition as embodied and of...
Main Author: | Marzia Beltrami |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | deu |
Published: |
Università degli Studi di Milano
2020-06-01
|
Series: | Enthymema |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/enthymema/article/view/12383 |
Similar Items
-
But There Is Magic, Too: Confronting Adolescents’ Realities in Francesca Lia Block’s Fairy-Tale Rewritings
by: Marie Emilie Walz
Published: (2021-07-01) -
When fairy godmothers are men : Dickens's gendered use of fairy tales as a form of narrative control in Bleak House
by: Smith, Melissa Ann, master of arts in English
Published: (2012) -
Emerging Vectors of Narratology: Toward Consolidation or Diversification? (A Response)
by: Stefan Iversen, et al.
Published: (2013-12-01) -
The Antinomies of Narratology and the Difficulty of Any Theoretical Consolidation
by: Brian Richardson
Published: (2013-12-01) -
Emerging Vectors of Narratology: Toward Consolidation or Diversification? (A Response)
by: Lars-Åke Skalin
Published: (2013-12-01)