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Stream of consciousness: Difference between revisions

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==History==
==History==


The narrative technique was developed by the French novelist, Edouard Dujardin and named by William James in his book "Principles of Psychology". In 1887, Dujardin wrote the first "stream of consciousness" novel, Les Lauriers sont Coupes, (Hoffman, 124). According to Myers and Wukasch, the stream of consciousness represents "the unbroken flow of thought of a character's conscious and subconscious mind"(346). Writers most known for this kind of writing are James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and William Faulkner(Gibb,246).
The narrative technique was developed by the French novelist, Edouard Dujardin and named by William James in his book "Principles of Psychology". In 1887, Dujardin wrote the first "stream of consciousness" novel, Les Lauriers sont Coupes, (Hoffman, 124). According to Myers and Wukasch, the stream of consciousness represents "the unbroken flow of thought of a character's conscious and subconscious mind" (346). Writers most known for this kind of writing are James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and William Faulkner(Gibb,246).


==Works Cited==
==Works Cited==
44

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