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  1. Chatterton, which was published and shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1987, is an example of Peter Ackroyd’s postmodern fiction. In her book The Politics of Postmodernism, Linda Hutcheon claims that “Peter Ackroyd’s Chatterton offers a working example of a postmodern novel whose form and content de-naturalize representation in both ...

  2. Jun 20, 2021 · The detective fiction genre undergoes a radical change along with the thematic and structural innovations brought about by postmodernism in the second half of the twentieth century.

  3. This book explores the postmodernist representation of reality and argues that historiographic metafictional texts, such as Peter Ackroyd’s Chatterton (1987), are hetero-referential in their ...

  4. SOURCE: “Peter Ackroyd, Postmodern Play and Chatterton, ” in Twentieth Century Literature, Vol. 38, No. 2, Summer, 1992, pp. 240-61. [ In the following essay, Finney provides an overview of ...

  5. Susan Elizabeth Sweeney mention Chatterton as a research novel which is the subgenre of metaphysical detective story "in which finding the "missing person" characteristically leads, as in other

  6. Chatterton is itself a literary impersonation, a kind of transvestite novel: a mystery novel, a literary biography, and an English comedy, at once wildly comical and deadly serious, light yet ...

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  8. Chatterton's motif of the dying father, this text uses its. postmodern weirdness to intensify and consolidate that very fa- miliar site of emotional involvement. The English Patient, on the other hand, creates an intimate relationship between the ideas of. postmodernism and the emotional experience created through.

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