The Murder of a Tale
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AudienceAbstract
A review of one spectator's experiences in the role of a silenced voyeur and an explorer of intricate installations, this essay reads Sleep No More as a "literary lite" phenomenon.
A review of one spectator's experiences in the role of a silenced voyeur and an explorer of intricate installations, this essay reads Sleep No More as a "literary lite" phenomenon.
Pamela J. Rader is Associate Professor of English at Georgian Court University, a liberal arts university in New Jersey, where she teaches world, women's, and multi-ethnic literatures. Building on her book, Multi-Ethnicity As a Resource for the Literary Imagination (Mellen), her essays and articles have appeared in the following international journals: Atenea, Antípodas, and Label Me Latino/a; her research interests include the writings of Sandra Cisneros, Maryse Condé, Edwidge Danticat, Junot Díaz, Louise Erdrich, and Marjane Satrapi. She has published book reviews for Shofar and MELUS. Her current book project examines productive silences in literature.