Archivo de la etiqueta: Narrativa Inglesa del los s XX y XXI

Research: Bibliography and URLs

Du Maurier, D. My Cousin Rachel (introduction by Sally Beauman). Virago, 2003. Du Maurier, D. Rebecca (introduction by Sally Beauman). Virago, 2003. Du Maurier, D. The Scapegoat (introduction Lisa Appignanesi). Virago, 2003 Frampton, Megan. That’s What SHE Said: The Unreliable … Sigue leyendo

Publicado en Sin categoría | Etiquetado , | Deja un comentario

Conclusion on “Rebecca”, “My Cousin Rachel” and “The Scapegoat”

When they were published, this books dind’t interested critics so much. They actually just were labeled as women’s fiction, so they weren’t considered good at all. Reading this kind of books was a waste of time. But when they started … Sigue leyendo

Publicado en Sin categoría | Etiquetado , | Deja un comentario

The Unreliability of the Narrator on “Rebecca”, “My Cousin Rachel” and “The Scapegoat”

The main conflict that I faced when reading this three books (Rebecca, My Cousin Rachel and The Scapegoat) was that I couldn’t trust the narrators at all, which in all of three cases happen to be the main character. The … Sigue leyendo

Publicado en Sin categoría | Etiquetado , | Deja un comentario

Introduction to “Rebecca”, “My Cousin Rachel” and “The Scapegoat”

Rebecca (1938), My Cousin Rachel (1951) and The Scapegoat (1957) are the three novels by Daphne du Maurier that I’d decided to read and analyze for this paper. I chose this three books in particular, and not others by the … Sigue leyendo

Publicado en Sin categoría | Etiquetado , | Deja un comentario

Research: Bibliography and URLs

Du Maurier, Daphne. Rebecca (introduction by Sally Beauman). Virago, 2003. Frampton, Megan. That’s What SHE Said: The Unreliable Narrator in Romance Novels. Heroes and Heartbreakers, January 2013. House, Christian. Daphne du Maurier always said her novel Rebecca was a study … Sigue leyendo

Publicado en Sin categoría | Etiquetado , | Deja un comentario