Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | English word AUTOFICTION
AUTOFICTION
Definitions of AUTOFICTION
- A blend of autobiography and fiction; faction.
Number of letters
11
Is palindrome
No
Examples of Using AUTOFICTION in a Sentence
- An autobiographical novel, also known as a autobiographical fiction, fictional autobiography, or autobiographical fiction novel, is a type of novel which uses autofiction techniques, or the merging of autobiographical and fictive elements.
- She then published Le temps n'est rien (Plon, 1958), an autofiction in which the conflict between the past and the present is still central, and Le visage effleuré de peine (Grasset, 1964).
- Some critics have highlighted his literary works as postmodern literature since it challenges fiction through autofiction, metafiction, metalepsis, and by intertwining possible fictional worlds.
- The magazine ELLE, describes the film as "neurotic and fictional psychodrama", Le Parisien, speaks of appropriation, Les Inrockuptibles of self-indulgence, pure and hard narcissism, egotism, half smart, half charmer, who wants to make “a documentary, especially not a fiction”, anticipating the “trial that we will not fail to bring against her”, Liberation, of voyeurism, Le Monde, of the troubled delight of autofiction, a technique with which "Ingmar Bergman, who has only ever filmed his intimate life, escapes pathetic infamy" and whose rise is "concomitant with that of reality TV", Première, of film-happening unburdened by any varnish, holding investigation, spitting, mourning work and raised fist, Rolling Stone, of staggering family therapy of psychological violence and Télérama, of fragile, excessive and rough film, brutally sincere.
- The author of experimental prose, mixing elements of conventional narratives with autofiction, textuality, intertextuality and, in some cases, fantasy, he placed his work at the meeting point between Postmodernism and a minimalist form of Neorealism.
- Confessions d'une radine, published in 2003, continued Cusset's work of autofiction and self-criticism with a sequence of funny and spicy stories that probe self-hatred related to money - a topic that may be even more taboo than sex.
- Molnar's published work includes editing the anthologies Unpublishable and Archways 1, which feature authors such as James Cañón, Jean Kyoung Frazier, John Farris, and Cyrée Jarelle Johnson - as well as fiction in Unpublishable and NDA: An Autofiction Anthology.
- In a lukewarm review for The New York Times, Dwight Garner described the book as "a defensive castling move", referring to the author's suggestion that the turn in literary culture from brio-filled imaginative writing toward the humbler delights of "autofiction" is the reason for misunderstanding and mistreatment of his works.
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