Bret Easton Ellis' perhaps most popular novel American Psycho
This essay focuses on the character Patrick Bateman in American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis and his unreliability as a narrator and compares it to the
Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho this article discusses the efforts of the makers of the 2000 film adaptation to "rehabilitate" the novel.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/1566351
6 Sept 2010 In Ellis's scandalous end-of-the-eighties novel American Psycho the tale of. Patrick Bateman—a Wall Street yuppie who claims to be a ...
process is analyzed in the novel American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis. Depicting the 1980s. New York City yuppie generation the novel offers an interesting
society in order to criticize consumerism and capitalism in his novel American Psycho. By applying. Marxist theory
Ellis's American Psycho. Martin Weinreich. ABSTRACT. Besides causing a major scandal after its publication in 1991 Bret Easton Ellis's third n.
5 Jan 2006 Patrick Bateman: The American Psycho. Much of the initial criticism of American Psycho found it lacking in artistic value or social importance ...
a realization that American Psycho is a deeply satirical novel which stands in moral judgment of the actions of its narrator Patrick Bateman.