CEA Critic, Volume 60Department of English, Texas A & M University, 1997 |
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... Ourika ” ( xxix ) . Given the cachet of both a highly respected institution in the profession and a premier British novelist who confesses his immediate attraction to the text , Ourika ought to move toward a central position in the ...
... Ourika ” ( xxix ) . Given the cachet of both a highly respected institution in the profession and a premier British novelist who confesses his immediate attraction to the text , Ourika ought to move toward a central position in the ...
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... Ourika by sharing joyful news of his first son . Once again , Ourika is reminded that she has lost not only a husband / lover but also the possibility of children . She laments : What did it matter that I might now have been the black ...
... Ourika by sharing joyful news of his first son . Once again , Ourika is reminded that she has lost not only a husband / lover but also the possibility of children . She laments : What did it matter that I might now have been the black ...
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... Ourika , presumably in a form somewhat shorter than this novel , short as it may be . The original oral version was based on what must have been a story told to her : the history of a black child who was raised by an aristocratic French ...
... Ourika , presumably in a form somewhat shorter than this novel , short as it may be . The original oral version was based on what must have been a story told to her : the history of a black child who was raised by an aristocratic French ...
Conteúdo
Archetypes of the Feminine | 14 |
Nature and the | 35 |
Charlotte Vive | 60 |
Direitos autorais | |
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