CCL, no. 111-112, Fall-Winter 2003
Return to Contents »A Daughter's Place: The Intertextuality of Gene Stratton-Porter's Laddie and Louisa May Alcott's Little Women / Jane GoldsteinGene Stratton-Porter's Laddie and Louisa May Alcott's Little Women are autobiographical family stories of historical narration. The two authors use many of the same devices, a situation that provides an opportunity to illuminate each text through parallel investigation. Cet article offre une lecture intertextuelle de deux romans populaires, Laddie de Gene Stratton-Porter et Les Quatre Filles du docteur March de Louisa May Alcott, dont les stratégies narratives sont semblables dans la narration historique. This page last updated 21 April 2004. |
|
| Copyright © 2004 Canadian Children's Press / University of Guelph | |