A reading of Van Gogh's collected correspondence by way of a set of ideas about dialogue and self-fashioning derived especially from Mikhail Bakhtin. Patrick Grant's central claim is that Van Gogh's letters raise from within themselves questions and issues to which they also respond dialogically, thereby thematizing the process of self-fashioning within their own discourse. The manner in which they do so is a marker of the specifically literary dimension of Van Gogh's writing. Complementing Grant's earlier critical analysis ...
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A reading of Van Gogh's collected correspondence by way of a set of ideas about dialogue and self-fashioning derived especially from Mikhail Bakhtin. Patrick Grant's central claim is that Van Gogh's letters raise from within themselves questions and issues to which they also respond dialogically, thereby thematizing the process of self-fashioning within their own discourse. The manner in which they do so is a marker of the specifically literary dimension of Van Gogh's writing. Complementing Grant's earlier critical analysis, The Letters of Vincent van Gogh: A Critical Study (AU Press, 2014), this study brings Van Gogh's collected correspondence fully into the domain of modern literary studies, both critical and theoretical--as is long overdue.
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Add this copy of My Own Portrait in Writing: Self-Fashioning in the to cart. $33.26, like new condition, Sold by Bestsellers Returns rated 2.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Hereford, HEREFORDSHIRE, UNITED KINGDOM, published 2015 by Athabasca University Press.