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Página 33
There is no " objective ” narrator that organises the different individual discourses , by leading the reader from one ... be taken for the authorial voice , addressed as it is to the reader , just as traditional narrators would do .
There is no " objective ” narrator that organises the different individual discourses , by leading the reader from one ... be taken for the authorial voice , addressed as it is to the reader , just as traditional narrators would do .
Página 34
What I mean is that the Oriental bodies and spaces become increasingly strange as the narrator travels from Jerusalem to land , further East in the second half of this narrative . Inhibitory warnings against transgressions and ...
What I mean is that the Oriental bodies and spaces become increasingly strange as the narrator travels from Jerusalem to land , further East in the second half of this narrative . Inhibitory warnings against transgressions and ...
Página 114
The 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 ...
The 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 ...
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THE ATLANTIC LITERARY REVIEW | 1 |
Ana Bringas | 24 |
Paula GarcíaRamirez | 42 |
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American analysis anthologies appears attempt authority becomes Bertha Black body British called characters child colonial communication concern construction context create critical cultural death described desire discourse dream English experience fact female feminist fiction figure hand human identity images imagination important Indian individual interpretation irony Italy Jane John kind knowledge language literary literature live London look meaning memory moral myth narrative narrator native nature never notes notion novel Orient past person perspective play poetics poetry political position possible present published question reader reading reality reason reference relation relationship relevance represents response role sense sexual slave slavery social society space Sperber story structure suggests tells theory things traditional Travels understanding University Utopia utterance voice Western Wilson woman women writing York young