@article{oai:keisen.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000280, author = {HONES,, Sheila and HONES,, Sheila}, journal = {恵泉女学園大学人文学部紀要, Keisen Jogakuen College Bulletin}, month = {Jan}, note = {P(論文), This paper is intended to contribute to two separate discussions: the first, taking place within the field of cultural geography, has to do with the reading of fiction for the purposes of geographical research and teaching; the second, taking place within the field of literary studies, has to do with the interpretation of a short story by the American writer Willa Cather. The two discussions, geographical and literary, connect: the analysis of the story functions here as a case study illustrating the need for an awareness of narrative point of view in the reading of fictional presentations of landscape and the experience of place. The consideration of a variety of readings of the story, "A Wagner Matinee," demonstrates the ways in which interpretations of narrative point of view influence the conclusions a reader draws regarding a text's presentation of landscapes, places, and the sense of place.}, pages = {109--131}, title = {The Landscape According to Whom? : Place and Point of View in Willa Cather's "A Wagner Matinee"}, volume = {5}, year = {1993} }