Woolfian border poetics and contemporary circadian novels
Virginia Woolf’s circadian novel Mrs Dalloway (1925) has inspired many successors, some of them important works in their own right. Although few of these novels are as explicitly linked to Mrs Dalloway as Michael Cunningham’s The Hours (1998), more recent novels such as Ian McEwan’s Saturday (2005)...
Main Author: | Anka Ryall |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Septentrio Academic Publishing
2014-07-01
|
Series: | Nordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/nordlit/article/view/3061 |
Similar Items
-
‘The Tangled Confluence’: Hybrid Accounts of Madness in Will Self’s The Quantity Theory of Insanity and Ian McEwan’s Enduring Love
by: Diane Gagneret
Published: (2017-06-01) -
Unsettling postscripts and epilogues in A. S. Byatt’s Possession and Ian McEwan’s Atonement
by: Armelle Parey
Published: (2018-07-01) -
An Interview with Ian McEwan
by: Vanessa Guignery
Published: (2018-12-01) -
The Electric Golem: Updating The Myth in Ian McEwan’s <em>Machines Like Me</em>
by: Manuel Botero Camacho, et al.
Published: (2021-08-01) -
As Horas: adaptação de Virginia Woolf para o leitor comum
by: Ana Carolina de Carvalho Mesquita
Published: (2020-01-01)