Intertextual Weaving in the Work of Linda L�: Imagining the Ideal Reader uncovers the primary textual relationship that Linda L� (1963- ), the most prolific Francophone author of the Vietnamese diaspora, fosters with a literary precursor of Austrian descent: the feminist writer-in-exile, Ingeborg Bachmann (1926-1973). This study offers an overdue exploration of the notably European roots of L�'s writerly formation. It traces an unexamined feminist import in her work to a sixteen-year inter- and intra-textual ...
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Intertextual Weaving in the Work of Linda L�: Imagining the Ideal Reader uncovers the primary textual relationship that Linda L� (1963- ), the most prolific Francophone author of the Vietnamese diaspora, fosters with a literary precursor of Austrian descent: the feminist writer-in-exile, Ingeborg Bachmann (1926-1973). This study offers an overdue exploration of the notably European roots of L�'s writerly formation. It traces an unexamined feminist import in her work to a sixteen-year inter- and intra-textual engagement with Bachmann and positions the latter as an imagined ideal reader of L�'s oeuvre. Intertextual analyses of Bachmann's post-war novel, Malina, with L�'s literary essays, early fiction, and trilogy, reveal that to overcome the challenges of writing in exile L� adopts an alternative literary fore-bear of the European tradition.
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