The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 2,Edições 3-4Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2001 |
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Página 183
... understanding of the post - colonial condition and specifically of the construction of gender within it . Diasporic movement characterizes postcolonial people connected by language to the metropole and by cultural memory to the homeland ...
... understanding of the post - colonial condition and specifically of the construction of gender within it . Diasporic movement characterizes postcolonial people connected by language to the metropole and by cultural memory to the homeland ...
Página 146
born without understanding the boundaries , born mo no - no brain ” ( JP 135 ) . In Choy's novel , the social tensions with the Japanese - Canadian population displace onto a secondary ground the relation between the Chinese and the ...
born without understanding the boundaries , born mo no - no brain ” ( JP 135 ) . In Choy's novel , the social tensions with the Japanese - Canadian population displace onto a secondary ground the relation between the Chinese and the ...
Página 173
... understanding that makes all cultures hybrid . The conflict between the view of cultures as being authentic or hybrid could then also be understood as chiefly a difference in the level of abstraction . The hybrid normal condition ...
... understanding that makes all cultures hybrid . The conflict between the view of cultures as being authentic or hybrid could then also be understood as chiefly a difference in the level of abstraction . The hybrid normal condition ...
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THE ATLANTIC LITERARY REVIEW | 7 |
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R J Ellis | 38 |
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American artistic authority becomes belonging body British called Canada Canadian characters Chinese colonial comes condition construction created critics Cuban cultural death describes discourse English ethnic exile experience face fact fall feel female fiction figure finally give global hand human hybridity idea identity important India individual interest issue Italy kind land language later literary literature lives London look means memory mother move multiple myths Naipaul narrative narrator native nature never notes novel offers origin passage past play poet poetry political position possible postcolonial present protagonist reality reference relation relationship represents role Rushdie seems sense situation social society space spirit story studies tradition turn University vision Western woman women writing York