Banfield has taught at Berkeley since 1975 and is a specialist in linguistics, critical theory and the use of philosophy as a cornerstone of modernism.[2] In the field of narratology, Banfield has been given lasting credit for her concepts of narratorless subjectivity and addresseelessness in narration.[3]
Banfield, Ann (2000). The phantom table : Woolf, Fry, Russell, and epistemology of modernism. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0-521-03403-6.
^Meir Sternberg: "Self-consciousness as a Narrative Feature", in: A Companion to Narrative Theory, edited by James Phelan and Peter J. Rabinowitz, Blackwell Publishing, Malden/Massachusetts and Oxford 2005, paperback edition 2008, ISBN978-1-4051-1476-9Table of contents, pp. 232–252