Legacy, Volume 12Department of English, University of Massachusetts, 1995 |
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Halaman 18
... identity . Literally moving , pioneer women were also figuratively in transition . Literally between places , they were figuratively between the " locations " and the " locators " of iden- tity , appearing relatively unmarked by the ...
... identity . Literally moving , pioneer women were also figuratively in transition . Literally between places , they were figuratively between the " locations " and the " locators " of iden- tity , appearing relatively unmarked by the ...
Halaman 25
... identity as a fictive construct . In each case , the narrator is only par- tially within a distinct identity , remain- ing partially outside - on its threshold . This liminal narrative stance is charac- teristic of Kirkland , who writes ...
... identity as a fictive construct . In each case , the narrator is only par- tially within a distinct identity , remain- ing partially outside - on its threshold . This liminal narrative stance is charac- teristic of Kirkland , who writes ...
Halaman 126
... identity and subjectivity . Thus captivity narratives , for which Rowlandson's was the prototype and persistent model , were significant in the process , at once political and textual , by which the colonizers came to see themselves as ...
... identity and subjectivity . Thus captivity narratives , for which Rowlandson's was the prototype and persistent model , were significant in the process , at once political and textual , by which the colonizers came to see themselves as ...
Isi
Gender and Racial Identity | 17 |
Groves Maria Gowen Brooks c 17951845 | 47 |
Veronica Stewart New Poems of Emily Dickinson edited by William | 56 |
Hak Cipta | |
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Ameri American Women angelic argues autobiography become beginning Black body Boston Brooks calls captivity century character civilization claim construction critics cultural death describes domestic early edition editor Elizabeth ends essays experience fact female feminist fiction figure Foster frontier gaze gender Graham's Magazine Harriet History identity ideology includes Indian individual interest Jackson John Journal Knight LEGACY Leonora letters literary Literature lives lynching male Maria Mary material ment Michigan mother move narrative nature nineteenth-century Notes novel Park Pennsylvania State University play poems political position Press provides published question race racial readers Record relations Review rhetoric role Rowlandson's Sarah says seems sexual slave social society Southern spiritual Stephens story Studies suggests tion tradition University voice Wells-Barnett white women woman womanhood women writers writing written York