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The Reader Strikes Back:A Narratological Approach to Paul Auster’s The New York Trilogy

Abstract
The detective novel genre has long been a genre of conventions. Paul Auster’s The New York Trilogy is a detective story with a twist that challenges the established conventions of the genre. In this essay, I will use narratology, with a focus on Roland Barthes’ S/Z, to study Auster’s text. I will show that it is by using the five codes that Barthes presents in S/Z, that I am able to display how Auster challenges the conventions. In this reading I will also relate The New York Trilogy to other detective fiction and to Barthes’ notion of ‘the death of the author’. Ultimately, I will show that Auster does confirm ‘the death of the author’. In the narratives the author is disseminated step by step, and eventually ceases to play an important role.
Degree
Student essay
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/37157
Collections
  • Kandidatuppsatser / Institutionen för språk och litteraturer
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Student essay (490.8Kb)
Date
2014-10-09
Author
Henriksson, Åsa
Keywords
Paul Auster
The New York Trilogy
The Death of the Author
Roland Barthes
Postmodernism
Narratology
Series/Report no.
SPL magisteruppsats engelska
SPL 2014-055
Language
eng
Metadata
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