Results 71 to 80 of about 172 (124)

The Mad Woman in Jane Eyre, Wide Sargasso Sea and The French Lieutenant’s Woman

open access: yesمجلة جامعة دمشق للآداب و العلوم الإنسانية
This paper explores the mad woman in three novels: Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea and John Fowles’ The French Lieutenant’s Woman.
Munira Mohammad Hamad
doaj  

Fashion in Jean Rhys/Jean Rhys in Fashion

Modernist Cultures, 2016
This article proposes a reciprocal relationship between Jean Rhys's interwar fiction and the mass media that popularised her work in the 1960s and 1970s. Surveying the signs that Rhys and her writing had become fashionable – for example, press reviews and profiles, including in colour supplements and fashion magazines (even her own shoot), along with ...
exaly   +2 more sources

Jean Rhys

2023
Jean Rhys' position upon the literary map of the 20th century remains unstable, even after Wide Sargasso Sea (1966). She shunned public exposure and yet, desperately sought acknowledgement by her own peers; she stood away from the modernist circles of Montparnasse, in Paris, and yet, explored a radically avant-garde writing which retrospectively makes ...
Lopoukhine, Juliana   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Jean Rhys

Choice Reviews Online, 1999
Jean Rhys has long been central to debates in feminist, modernist, Caribbean, British and postcolonial writing. Elaine Savory's study, first published in 1999, incorporates and modifies previous critical approaches and is a critical reading of Rhys's entire oeuvre, including the stories and autobiography, and is informed by Rhys's own manuscripts ...
  +4 more sources

Jean Rhys

2015
Jean Rhys (1890-1979) is the author of five novels and over seventy short stories. The essays collected in Jean Rhys: Twenty-First-Century Approaches demonstrate Rhys’s centrality to modernism and to postcolonial literature alike by addressing her stories and novels from the 1920s and 1930s,
Erica Johnson, Patricia Moran
  +4 more sources

Jean Rhys’s Plantation Modernism

2023
Abstract Chapter 5 reads Jean Rhys’s Voyage in the Dark (1934) in light of Simon Lewis and Mark Maslin’s account of the Anthropocene, which dates the epoch as starting at the time of the ‘Columbian Exchange’ of biotas following the colonization of the Americas. On the surface, Rhys’s novel seems ill-equipped to register the environmental
openaire   +1 more source

Jean Rhys:

The Yearbook of English Studies, 1994
Angela Smith, Coral Ann Howells
  +4 more sources

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