Arranging Grief: Sacred Time and the Body in Nineteenth-century AmericaNYU Press, 2007 - 345 páginas 2008 Winner, MLA First Book Prize |
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... woman why she has ceased to bewail her losses and learns that she believes her husband managed, by grieving himself to death, to join their child in the "country of spirits" and care for him. Instead of faulting the Indians for ...
... woman is further confirmed by observing her nightly repetition of a "plaintive melancholy song" at her family's burial site, which demonstrates to him, despite her diurnal stoicism, that "some particles of that reluctance to be ...
... woman who sits there by the lamp, dropping slow tears, while she prepares the memorials of her own lost one for the outcast wanderer. (154) The "slow tears" emphasized in this passage, which recall both those wept for Eliza's dead ...
... woman! What would you think if some foreign nation, unknown to you, should come and carry away from you three lovely children. . . . What would you think of them?"84 This interjection predicts a later moment, near the close of the ...
... woman "is thought of as necessarily maternal."97 In this sense, this affinity is most usefully understood not as an essential assertion of women's conformity to nature but as an identification of a particular chronobiopolitical location ...
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9780814752227_Lucia_339344_11 | 339 |
9780814752227_Lucia_345346_11 | 345 |
Outras edições - Ver todos
Arranging Grief: Sacred Time and the Body in Nineteenth-Century America Dana Luciano Visualização parcial - 2007 |
Arranging Grief: Sacred Time and the Body in Nineteenth-Century America Dana Luciano Prévia não disponível - 2007 |