CEA Critic, Volume 57Department of English, Texas A & M University, 1994 |
De dentro do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 47
Página 35
... Later in City of Ladies , Rectitude reminds Christine of her own early education : “ Your father , who was a great scientist and philoso- pher , did not believe that women were worth less by knowing science ; rather , as you know , he ...
... Later in City of Ladies , Rectitude reminds Christine of her own early education : “ Your father , who was a great scientist and philoso- pher , did not believe that women were worth less by knowing science ; rather , as you know , he ...
Página 70
... later , " was both a refusal to accept appeasement and a justification for Mather's later acceptance of the new charter , which saved the colony's political life and permitted the Puritan ideal in changed form to continue into the ...
... later , " was both a refusal to accept appeasement and a justification for Mather's later acceptance of the new charter , which saved the colony's political life and permitted the Puritan ideal in changed form to continue into the ...
Página 77
... later , with the woman's daughter ; and finally , forty years later , with the woman's granddaughter . I To understand the nature of desire in The Well - Beloved , it is necessary first to look at several important theories of desire ...
... later , with the woman's daughter ; and finally , forty years later , with the woman's granddaughter . I To understand the nature of desire in The Well - Beloved , it is necessary first to look at several important theories of desire ...
Conteúdo
REEVALUATING THE BOUNDARIES | 1 |
Who Speaks for Autobiography? | 9 |
The Oral Autobiography | 20 |
Direitos autorais | |
9 outras seções não mostradas
Outras edições - Ver todos
Termos e frases comuns
action American argue arguments attempt authority autobiography Baldwin become begins called Christine College course create critical cultural David death desire discussion Douglass early effect England English essay evidence example experience fact father feel fiction figure final Giovanni's human idea identity images imagination important individual influence interest issues James John kind language later learning literary literature lives look means memory mind moved narrative nature never notes novel once phallogocentric play poem political possible practice present question readers reading relation relationship response rhetoric role seems sense slave social speak story suggests teaching tell theory things thought traditional true truth trying understand University Utopia voice Willy woman women writing written York