The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 2,Edições 1-2Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2001 |
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Página 33
... narrator that organises the different individual discourses , by leading the reader from one voice to the other , or bridging the information gaps in the utterly fragmented structure . Whitechapel's opening discourse might initially be ...
... narrator that organises the different individual discourses , by leading the reader from one voice to the other , or bridging the information gaps in the utterly fragmented structure . Whitechapel's opening discourse might initially be ...
Página 34
... narrator travels from Jerusalem to land , further East in the second half of this narrative . Inhibitory warnings against transgressions and ethnographic descriptions of different cultural practices become even more defined — and more ...
... narrator travels from Jerusalem to land , further East in the second half of this narrative . Inhibitory warnings against transgressions and ethnographic descriptions of different cultural practices become even more defined — and more ...
Página 114
... narration here signifies a process of remembering on the part of the narrator . The mad crerole woman from Jamaica , imprisoned in the attic of an English country - mansion , desperately tries to re - construct her past by groping down ...
... narration here signifies a process of remembering on the part of the narrator . The mad crerole woman from Jamaica , imprisoned in the attic of an English country - mansion , desperately tries to re - construct her past by groping down ...
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