Legacy, Volume 13Department of English, University of Massachusetts, 1996 |
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Halaman 31
... move , or speak for several days , and paralyzed when he awakes , Helwyze's static posture in the final pages of the novel awkwardly mimics the objectification to which he has subjected Gladys throughout . II : " Let the woman go ...
... move , or speak for several days , and paralyzed when he awakes , Helwyze's static posture in the final pages of the novel awkwardly mimics the objectification to which he has subjected Gladys throughout . II : " Let the woman go ...
Halaman 47
... move the plot simply by sug- gesting Frado's potential for autono- my - her ability to choose if only she had the opportunity — to sustain her role as protagonist Frado must make actual decisions rather than simply think about them ...
... move the plot simply by sug- gesting Frado's potential for autono- my - her ability to choose if only she had the opportunity — to sustain her role as protagonist Frado must make actual decisions rather than simply think about them ...
Halaman 160
... move away from the nationalist dichotomies and reflect a borderland identity . Jane Marcus discusses the politics of exile , beginning with a critique of Woolf's comment about the “ very fine Negress " and moving to a much - needed re ...
... move away from the nationalist dichotomies and reflect a borderland identity . Jane Marcus discusses the politics of exile , beginning with a critique of Woolf's comment about the “ very fine Negress " and moving to a much - needed re ...
Isi
A JOURNAL | 1 |
Mary Chapman Gender and Influence in Louisa May Alcotts | 19 |
Jill Jones The Disappearing I in Our Nig | 38 |
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Istilah dan frasa umum
Alcott American appear argues artist become begins body Boston called Canaris Caroline century chapter character Child Christian collection Cooke Cooke's critical cultural death describes discussion domestic early England essays example experience female fiction figure forces Frado freedom gaze gender girl Gladys Harriet Helwyze Hentz History Hopkins House husband ideal identity important includes individual influence Jacobs John Journal LEGACY letters Lily Linda literary Literature lives male marriage Mary Michigan moral mother move narrative narrator nature nineteenth-century notes novel object Pennsylvania person plot poem political published race racial readers relation religion religious remains Review role Sappho says sense sentimental sexual slave slavery social society Southern sphere story Studies tion tradition University voice Warren Wharton Wheatley Wilson woman women writing York young