CEA Critic, Volume 60Department of English, Texas A & M University, 1997 |
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Página 17
... relationship with one's larger Self ( C. Jung , “ Relations " 121-23 ) —one must first become aware of , and accept as part of one's total being , those aspects of personality that the individual has rejected and repressed ( that is ...
... relationship with one's larger Self ( C. Jung , “ Relations " 121-23 ) —one must first become aware of , and accept as part of one's total being , those aspects of personality that the individual has rejected and repressed ( that is ...
Página 7
... relationship with Charles , as the two are separated by his need to marry , are Duras's contributions , drawn perhaps from her own experience with love . Duras first published the novel anonymously in an edition of only a few dozen ...
... relationship with Charles , as the two are separated by his need to marry , are Duras's contributions , drawn perhaps from her own experience with love . Duras first published the novel anonymously in an edition of only a few dozen ...
Página 19
... relationship between a white French Creole girl , Antoinette , and her black servant , Christophine , from Martinique . Al- though slavery has ended , white Creole families own the land in Jamaica and are politically dominant over the ...
... relationship between a white French Creole girl , Antoinette , and her black servant , Christophine , from Martinique . Al- though slavery has ended , white Creole families own the land in Jamaica and are politically dominant over the ...
Conteúdo
Archetypes of the Feminine | 14 |
Nature and the | 35 |
Charlotte Vive | 60 |
Direitos autorais | |
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