Joseph Conrad and the Reader: Questioning Modern Theories of Narrative and Readership

In part one, "Theoretical Perspectives," Acheraïou provides a summary of Barthes's theory of the death of the author and demonstrates that Conrad did not share Barthes's notions about the relationships among the author, reader, and text: "where Barthes dismisses the writer a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Studies in the novel 2014, Vol.46 (1), p.125-126
1. Verfasser: DISANTO, MICHAEL JOHN
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description In part one, "Theoretical Perspectives," Acheraïou provides a summary of Barthes's theory of the death of the author and demonstrates that Conrad did not share Barthes's notions about the relationships among the author, reader, and text: "where Barthes dismisses the writer as a total absence, Conrad grants that novelist a real, though unstable footing in his writing" (19).
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subjects Conrad, Joseph (1857-1924)
Herodotus (c. 484 – 425/413 BCE)
Readers
Reading
REVIEWS
Thucydides (471-400 BC)
Writers
Writing
title Joseph Conrad and the Reader: Questioning Modern Theories of Narrative and Readership
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