Description
This book explores the fictions of three 19th-century writers--Poe, Hawthorne, and James--in which the first-person narator is both the central actor and the retrospective teller of tale. Auerbach argues that the first person is an attractive but dangerous form of self-revelation that foregrounds fundamental problems of literary representation. (Description from external book data)
listed in Literary Criticism | 6 similar books linked from this page.
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