The Atlantic Literary Review, Volume 2,Edições 1-2Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 2001 |
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Página 4
... reader for approval . Jane Eyre does not content herself with telling the story , leaving it for the reader to adjudicate accordingly ; more importantly , she continuously jumps out of her narrative into the reader's mind to read his ...
... reader for approval . Jane Eyre does not content herself with telling the story , leaving it for the reader to adjudicate accordingly ; more importantly , she continuously jumps out of her narrative into the reader's mind to read his ...
Página 5
... reader traces of anxiety that would follow from the reader's refusal to be persuaded . In other words , the style of the narrative with its recurrent appeal to the reader is itself evocative of Jane's fear of being discredited by a reader ...
... reader traces of anxiety that would follow from the reader's refusal to be persuaded . In other words , the style of the narrative with its recurrent appeal to the reader is itself evocative of Jane's fear of being discredited by a reader ...
Página 122
... reader to locate Antoinette in her home island ; at the same time it also helps the reader - even a causal one - to perceive the assertive difference of the ' English ' of postcolonial writings from the ' Queen's English ' of the ...
... reader to locate Antoinette in her home island ; at the same time it also helps the reader - even a causal one - to perceive the assertive difference of the ' English ' of postcolonial writings from the ' Queen's English ' of the ...
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