CEA Critic, Volume 60Department of English, Texas A & M University, 1997 |
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Página 43
... Ellen and Archer have derived their deepest convictions about morality , the meaning of life , and their happiness . To discard them would be to destroy themselves psychologically and morally . And that is not all : their love for each ...
... Ellen and Archer have derived their deepest convictions about morality , the meaning of life , and their happiness . To discard them would be to destroy themselves psychologically and morally . And that is not all : their love for each ...
Página 46
... Ellen wears an “ unusual dress " ( 9 ) that reveals " a little more shoulder and bosom than New York was accustomed to seeing " ( 14 ) . At his first sight of Ellen , Archer , a pillar of social propriety , is “ shocked and troubled ...
... Ellen wears an “ unusual dress " ( 9 ) that reveals " a little more shoulder and bosom than New York was accustomed to seeing " ( 14 ) . At his first sight of Ellen , Archer , a pillar of social propriety , is “ shocked and troubled ...
Página 47
... Ellen ; she holds him " to the morality implicit in Old New York's regulation of the process of generation " ( Wolff 323 ) . Thus , Ellen's relationship with the married Newland Archer , which everyone assumes is sexual , makes it ...
... Ellen ; she holds him " to the morality implicit in Old New York's regulation of the process of generation " ( Wolff 323 ) . Thus , Ellen's relationship with the married Newland Archer , which everyone assumes is sexual , makes it ...
Conteúdo
Archetypes of the Feminine | 14 |
Nature and the | 35 |
Charlotte Vive | 60 |
Direitos autorais | |
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