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Books in the Lettre series

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  • Save 17%
    by Evgenia Iliopoulou
    £32.49

    Second-person storytelling is a continually present and diverse technique in the history of literature that appears only once in the oeuvre of an author. Based on key narratives of the post-war period, Evgenia Iliopoulou approaches the phenomenon in an inductive way, starting out from the essentials of grammar and rhetoric, and aims to improve the general understanding of second-person narrative within literature. In its various forms and typologies, the second person amplifies and expands the limits of representation, thus remaining a narrative enigma: a small narrative gesture - with major narrative impact.

  • Save 17%
    - Toronto, New York, and Los Angeles in a Globalizing Age
    by Melanie Pooch
    £32.49

  • Save 19%
    - Urban Mentality in Contemporary London Novels
    by Nora Ple¿ke
    £50.49

  • Save 17%
    - Pearl S. Buck's American China
    by Vanessa Kunnemann
    £32.49

  • Save 18%
    - The Rhetoric of Healing and Democratization in Northern Reconstruction Writing, 1861-1882
    by Kirsten Twelbeck
    £45.99

  • Save 17%
    - Locating Masculinities from the Gothic Novel to Henry James
    by Gero Bauer
    £32.49

    Houses, Secrets, and the Closet investigates the literary production of masculinities and their relation to secrets and sexualities in 18th and 19th century fiction. It focusses on close readings of Gothic fiction, Sensation Novels, and tales by Horace Walpole, Ann Radcliffe, William Godwin, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Wilkie Collins, and Henry James. The study approaches these texts through the lens of domestic space, gender, knowledge, and power. This approach serves to investigate the cultural roots of the 'closet' - the male homosexual secret - which reveals a more general notion of male secrecy in modern society. The study thus contributes to a better understanding of the cultural history of masculinities and sexualities.

  • Save 17%
    - (Re-)Narrating Space in the Contemporary American Novel
    by Marcel Thoene
    £41.49

    This book focuses on the pivotal role which space and spatiality assume in plot and narrative discourse of contemporary U.S.-American literary narratives. Embarking from a new, spatialized approach to cultural history and particularly narrative theory that might also prove useful for neighboring philologies, Marcel Thoene hypothesizes that the canon of novels selected represents a dialectic of simultaneous affirmation and subversion of the American space myth. This results in an integrative and emancipatory function of space reflecting the current dynamic toward a more transcultural, diverse and conflictive post-national U.S.-American society.

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