CfP/CfA events
Unreliable Narration in Nineteenth- To Twenty-First-Century Fiction (ACLA 2025)
Beginning
29.05.2025
End
01.06.2025
Abstract submission deadline
14.10.2024
Organizer: Carlo Arrigoni
Co-Organizer: Irene Bulla
- What makes a narrator unreliable, and through which textual strategies is unreliability established?
- What is the role of unreliable narration in the development of the novel and the short story over the past two centuries? And what is the relationship between unreliable narration and literary genres (e.g. the historical novel, the fantastic tale)?
- How do geographical, historical, and social contexts influence the construction and reception of unreliable narrators?
- What role does unreliable narration play in representing marginalized voices or challenging dominant narratives?
- How does unreliable narration function as a tool for exploring memory, ideology, and perception, as well as ethical issues related to trust and manipulation?
- What is the relationship between unreliability and irony?
We welcome abstracts for 20-minute presentations, to be submitted through the ACLA portal. Please contact Carlo Arrigoni (carloarrigoni@edu.ulisboa.pt) and Irene Bulla (irene.bulla@gmail.com) with any questions.
Source of description: Information from the provider
Fields of research
Literary theory, Literature and sociology, Literature and cultural studies, Literature and geography/cartography, Literary genre, Novel, Literature of the 19th century, Literature of the 20th century, Literature of the 21st centuryLinks
Contact
Institutions
American Comparative Literature Association (ACLA)