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Sonia Wilson

    Personal Effects
    The Disappearing Boy
    • The Disappearing Boy

      • 200pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      Struggling to adapt to life in Ottawa, thirteen-year-old Neil MacLeod grapples with feelings of isolation after moving from Vancouver. The colder climate amplifies his sense of displacement, and his frustration deepens as his mother remains tight-lipped about the father he's never known. This emotional journey explores themes of identity, family secrets, and the challenges of fitting in.

      The Disappearing Boy
    • Five months before her death of tuberculosis in 1884, Marie Bashkirtseff, an aspiring artist and a would-be mondaine, composed a preface to her personal diary. In it, she brazenly declared that in the event of her early death her diary was to be published. Three years later, a truncated version of the diary appeared. Translated into English, championed by Barrès and Gladstone, taken up by young diarists from France to the US, the diary created a major sensation, remaining standard reading for young women in both the anglophone and francophone worlds until the 1930s. The first full-length study to explore the questions that reading Bashkirtseff's journal raises with respect to both genre and gender construction, Personal Effects examines the genre and gender issues at stake in Bashkirtseff's bid to go public with the personal, and explores the discursive strategies by which Bashkirtseff writes her journal from the private context of its keeping to a public context of reading. Wilson reads the diary as a performance of writing, one in which a display of the personal mediates between the subjective and the social, the private and the public. Book jacket.

      Personal Effects