The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 2,Edições 1-2Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2001 |
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Página 56
... moral concepts and in identifying the intrinsic relationship between the individual and the state . Individual metamorphosis can be achieved primarily through a transformation of collective social relations in which the person engages ...
... moral concepts and in identifying the intrinsic relationship between the individual and the state . Individual metamorphosis can be achieved primarily through a transformation of collective social relations in which the person engages ...
Página 97
... moral duality at the heart of many of these tales . The sense of shame , that deconstructs any eulogistic reading of the text , emphasizes this linearity and forms a sort of pre - condition for Kipling's Anglo- Indian narrative . This ...
... moral duality at the heart of many of these tales . The sense of shame , that deconstructs any eulogistic reading of the text , emphasizes this linearity and forms a sort of pre - condition for Kipling's Anglo- Indian narrative . This ...
Página 105
... moral codes of the white men . As she lies dying of a stab wound , after trying in vain to protect the white men from Gagool's treachery , a liminal moment arises in which fears of miscegenation and anxieties about racial purity can ...
... moral codes of the white men . As she lies dying of a stab wound , after trying in vain to protect the white men from Gagool's treachery , a liminal moment arises in which fears of miscegenation and anxieties about racial purity can ...
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