CEA Critic, Volume 60Department of English, Texas A & M University, 1997 |
De dentro do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 93
Página 15
... readers especially ? Of course , Jane Eyre appeals - imagina- tively , emotively , psychologically - to men as well ... reading , providing fertile ground for study of Charlotte Brontë's great novel within a feminist revision of Jung's ...
... readers especially ? Of course , Jane Eyre appeals - imagina- tively , emotively , psychologically - to men as well ... reading , providing fertile ground for study of Charlotte Brontë's great novel within a feminist revision of Jung's ...
Página 3
... reading audience and academe with the introduction and development of the novel and short story . Nonfiction entered ... reading public . At the close of the twentieth century , reading taste seems to mirror that of the seventeenth ...
... reading audience and academe with the introduction and development of the novel and short story . Nonfiction entered ... reading public . At the close of the twentieth century , reading taste seems to mirror that of the seventeenth ...
Página 43
... reader will likely come away from the reading with a deeper realization about life and relationships . E. B. White's essays on personal experience , such as the often - antholo- gized " Once More to the Lake , ” relate single moments in ...
... reader will likely come away from the reading with a deeper realization about life and relationships . E. B. White's essays on personal experience , such as the often - antholo- gized " Once More to the Lake , ” relate single moments in ...
Conteúdo
Archetypes of the Feminine | 14 |
Nature and the | 35 |
Charlotte Vive | 60 |
Direitos autorais | |
2 outras seções não mostradas
Outras edições - Ver todos
Termos e frases comuns
accept allows American appears Association attempt audience become begins calls century characters College comes course critical culture direct discussion Duras effect Eliot Ellen English English Studies essays example experience explains feels female feminine fiction fire force Fuller gender gives Greene heart Hester human ideas images individual Jane Jane's Jeffers kind language learned literary literature live liver look masculine meaning mind moral moves myth narrative narrator nature never nonfiction notes novel Ourika particular physics poem political possible present prose question reader reading represents rhetorical says seems Selzer sense sexual Snyder social society story strategies structure style suggests symbolic teaching tells theory things thought tradition turn unconscious understand University White woman women writing York