2003
DOI: 10.1177/09639470030124001
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Metaphors for the Self in A.S. Byatt’s the Biographer’s Tale

Abstract: When novelists create their characters and biographers re-create their subjects, both types of writer are either explicitly or implicitly applying a theory of personality through which they investigate the selfhood of the person. However, while many examples of novels and biographies in recent decades have emphasized the similarities between the two genres, especially in the area of character or person as subject, there appears to be no consensus on such a theory. A.S. Byatt is a novelist and biographer who is… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…After a series of difficulties and obstacles, they finally live happily ever after. However, this fairy tale was rewritten by Bayeux as follows: after they got married, each of them continued to engage in their own favourite business and hobbies, which is not the traditional meaning of "husband and wife follow each other" [11] .…”
Section: Classic Adaptation Of Narrativementioning
confidence: 99%
“…After a series of difficulties and obstacles, they finally live happily ever after. However, this fairy tale was rewritten by Bayeux as follows: after they got married, each of them continued to engage in their own favourite business and hobbies, which is not the traditional meaning of "husband and wife follow each other" [11] .…”
Section: Classic Adaptation Of Narrativementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Sweetser and Sullivan (in press) describe how the tomorrow and tomorrow speech in Macbeth tests a series of metaphors for Life, drawing out negative inferences from each, and ultimately presenting Life as a hopeless cause regardless of the source domain via which it is understood. On a larger scale, Wallhead (2003) explores how AS Byatt takes conventional metaphors for the Self, and then builds on these in creative ways in The Biographer’s Tale ; and Simon-Vandenbergen (1993) tracks metaphors related to speech and music throughout George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four . All these studies explore how the repeated use of particular metaphor ties in with the themes of a work.…”
Section: Definitions Of Extended Metaphor In Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%