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Eliza Haywood’s Intrusive Practices from the Perspective of Feminist Narratology
Author(s) -
Lyudmyla Lutsenko
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the advanced science journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2219-7478
pISSN - 2219-746X
DOI - 10.15550/asj.2014.05.080
Subject(s) - narratology , perspective (graphical) , sociology , psychoanalysis , art , literature , narrative , visual arts , psychology
This article aims to interpret intrusive narrative passages in works of Eliza Haywood (1693-1756), one of the most prolific eighteenth-century British novelists, in terms of a new postclassical narratological project that came into being in the 1990s - feminist narratology. Employing the notion of the engaging narrator that was suggested by Robin Warhol (1986) enables us to trace dynamics of Haywood's creative literary experiments with intrusive digressions intended to reduce the narrator's distance to the extradiegetic narratee and establish intimate relations with him/her.

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