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Karen Le Rossignol Karen Le Rossignol i(A92871 works by) (a.k.a. Karen Wilson)
Writing name for: Karen Wilson
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Disrupting Leaps of Experience: Digital Storyworlds, Transformative Poiesis/Praxis and Narrative Agency Karen Le Rossignol , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT Special Issue Website Series , October no. 57 2019;

'Entering the digital storyworld of Deakinopolis (a narrative-based world of interrelated settings, characters and situations) is about imaginatively entering an alternative fictional storyworld that largely presents as factual, an experience that mirrors tertiary learners’ realities. Malouf talks of experience of story as ‘… being taken out of ourselves into the skin of another; having adventures there that are both our own and not our own ... Release … into a dimension where reality is not limited’ (2008: 19).

'The digital storyworld of Deakinopolis contains alternative or imagined realities, where learners project their own experience in making this world coherent through their engagement with potentially unsettling perspectives. To encourage agency in active learner exploration, the storyworld is suspended out of time and sequence so that participants can imagine themselves through lapsed borders into that seemingly peripheral world. The learners activate their immersive engagement in this digital storyworld through praxical experience of unsettling perspectives, with potential for disrupting singular perspectives into transformative immersion of imagination as poiesis.' (Publication abstract) 

1 Disruption and Resonance in the Personal Essay Robin Freeman , Karen Le Rossignol , 2015 single work criticism
— Appears in: New Writing , vol. 12 no. 3 2015; (p. 384-397)
'The personal essay, as one of the most delightfully subjective manifestations of creative nonfiction, explores what is real and tangible, refined through the intimate perspective and curiosity of the writer. In her best works, the personal essayist has the capacity to disrupt her narratives in ways that will resonate with readers who are themselves adjusting to the disruption of their own personal narrative interactions by social media tools. This paper explores the process by which fragmentary episodes become segments of a linked narrative through the capacity of the personal essayist to leap associatively from personal into universal ‘truths’. Segments coalesce into cogent entities, drawn together as a resonant narrative by themes as echoes, or the deliberate juxtaposition of fragments of story. Such segments-as-narrative are based on perceptions of the essay as a disruptive text, which by the nature of its structure reverberates metaphorically beyond the known and the familiar.' (Publication abstract)
1 Karen Le Rossignol Launches ‘The Vine Bleeds’ by J M Yates Karen Le Rossignol , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , October - December no. 16 2015;

— Review of The Vine Bleeds : The Impact of Domestic Violence : A Woman's Journey of Spirit and Strength J M Yates , 2015 single work novel
1 Writer-as-Narrator : Engaging the Debate around the (Un)reliable Narrator in Memoir and the Personal Essay Robin Freeman , Karen Le Rossignol , 2015 single work criticism
— Appears in: TEXT : Journal of Writing and Writing Courses , April vol. 19 no. 1 2015;

'Subjective and personal forms of nonfiction writing are enjoying exponential popularity in English language publishing currently, as an interested public engages with ‘true’ stories of society and culture. Yet a paradox exists at the centre of this form of writing. As readers, we want to know who the writer is and what she has to tell us. Yet as writers we use a persona, a constructed character, a narrator who is only partially the writer, to deliver the narrative. How is a writer able to convey ‘true’ stories that are inherently reliant on memory, within a constructed narrative persona?

'We find a ‘gap’ between the writer and the narrator/protagonist on the page, an empowered creative space in which composition occurs, facilitating a balance between the facts and lived experiences from which ‘true’ stories are crafted, and the acknowledged fallibility of human memory. While the gap between writer and writer-as-narrator provides an enabling space for creative composition, it also creates space for the perception of unreliability. The width of this gap, we argue, is crucial. Only if the gap is small, if writer and writer-as-narrator share a set of passionately held values, can the writer-as-narrator become a believable entity, satisfying the reader with the ‘truth’ of their story.' (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon Voice Lines : poems 1987-1997 Karen Le Rossignol , Ashburton : CP Publishing , 1998 Z1239568 1998 selected work poetry
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