![]() After 10 days, we are unable to issue any refunds or exchanges.Īs long as the item(s) are unworn, or unused in their original condition, and packaging, we won't give you any hassle about your return (we will ask you a few questions about why, just to make future experiences better □).Įxchange requests will incur a $4.95 restocking and reshipping fee. However we must be contacted within 10 days of your receipt of the item (the day the tracking shows DELIVERED). ![]() If you are not happy with the merchandise you purchased, you may exchange or return it. We are committed to making sure you are 100% satisfied with your order! Do not worry.you will receive tracking numbers for all items! If you have ordered multiple items, you may receive them in multiple shipments. When your order has shipped, you will receive a shipping confirmation email that will include your tracking number. If you need an item quicker please inquire, by contacting us by email at We will let you know if there are any options to get your item to you quicker. Therefore, the time from when you place your order to when it arrives at your door will be between 4-14 business days. ![]() Please be advised that shipping delays can occur with any of the delivery companies. Please allow 2-5 additional days transit time (from the day it ships) for delivery. As one becomes simultaneously the agent and object of "gaze," one's own ontological security is profoundly shaken, and the very nature of narrative is called into question.Orders will take 2-7 business days to process, package and ship. Furthermore, Elmo holds in his hands a mirror, so that the reader is disconcertingly doubly the object of "gaze," both Elmo's gaze and, horrifyingly, his or her own. On this last page, Elmo stares boldly out at the reader, suddenly and without explanation seeming to have no need for concealment. The ground thus shifts under the reader's feet at this unexpected circumstance, but is removed completely on the final page, in which the relative positions of Elmo and the reader are completely reversed. The "hider" is not Elmo, as the reader has come to expect by means of sheer repetition on the previous pages, but rather is a previously unknown character named Zoe. However, at the end of the book, in a genre-defying tour de force, Elmo first subverts the expectations of the viewer by being completely absent from the penultimate page. Over the first several pages, the reader settles into a comfortable position of total control over Elmo, alternately revealing and concealing him at will by the means of fabric flaps which cover him. However, at the end of the book, in a genre-defying tour de force, Elmo In this book, Elmo exhibits a Lacanian anxiety at being the object of the viewer's gaze, manifested by his desire to "hide," both from the reader and from his "friends" in various social settings as depicted in the illustrations. ![]() In this book, Elmo exhibits a Lacanian anxiety at being the object of the viewer's gaze, manifested by his desire to "hide," both from the reader and from his "friends" in various social settings as depicted in the illustrations. ![]()
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