MISE EN ABYME AND RECCURSION IN THE HEARING TRUMPET GY LEONORA CARRINGTON
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ABSTRACT
This article analyses Leonora Carrington’s novel The Hearing Trumpet through the lenses of autotextuality, mise en abyme, and recursion. Inspired by the poetics of Radosvet Kolarov, the study traces how recurring visual and narrative elements construct a self-reflexive structure in which each new meaning emerges through the transformation of already familiar motifs. Mise en abyme functions not only as a device for embedding a story within a story, but also as a mechanism for unsettling the boundaries between different layers of the text, while recursive structures generate a fractal sense of a world that continuously creates itself. In this context, The Hearing Trumpet is approached as a microcosm of Carrington’s broader autotextual practice, evident across both her literary and visual works. The study argues that repetition in Carrington’s oeuvre is not mechanical but productive—a form of discursive desire through which texts unfold new meanings and interrelations.
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