The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 6Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2005 |
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Resultados 1-3 de 65
Página 57
... past was simply the past " ( 11 ) . And since all his " knowledge " comes from European books , his sense of history is not anchored in any cultural context . As a trope , this textual site is most significantly demonstrated when Salim ...
... past was simply the past " ( 11 ) . And since all his " knowledge " comes from European books , his sense of history is not anchored in any cultural context . As a trope , this textual site is most significantly demonstrated when Salim ...
Página 149
... past and leads her to remember that she had never received enough emotional support from her family . By acknowledging this , she also acknowledges the difference between her past condition and her present one ( in which a quiet refuge ...
... past and leads her to remember that she had never received enough emotional support from her family . By acknowledging this , she also acknowledges the difference between her past condition and her present one ( in which a quiet refuge ...
Página 160
... past . However , for Alice and Beth , the mutual communication achieved still remains a silent one and the very act of writing and reading the letters unites and divides them at the same time . Each is involved in a personal act of ...
... past . However , for Alice and Beth , the mutual communication achieved still remains a silent one and the very act of writing and reading the letters unites and divides them at the same time . Each is involved in a personal act of ...
Índice
Jalal Uddin Khan | 12 |
Tirthankar Das Purkayastha | 40 |
R S Krishnan | 54 |
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American appears argues attempt Barker become beginning body called characters colonial comes concern created Creole CRITICAL STUDIES cultural death Delhi describes emotion English existence experience expression face fact father feels fiction forces Ghosh give hand human husband identity imagined Indian Indian Americans individual interest interpretation issues language lines literary literature lives London look Manfred marriage means metafictional mind mother narrative narrator nature never novel object past play poem poet poetry political position present published question reader reality references relation relationship representation represents Rivers role says seems seen sense social society spirit story suggests things thought traditional translation turn understand University values voice woman women writing York