CEA Critic, Volume 56Department of English, Texas A & M University, 1993 |
De dentro do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 37
Página 9
... individual to give expression to both genders ) . Virginia Woolf , who struggled with gender differences in her ... individuals . The transformation of gender constitutes a rite of passage for Orlando . Prior to it , his reasoning and ...
... individual to give expression to both genders ) . Virginia Woolf , who struggled with gender differences in her ... individuals . The transformation of gender constitutes a rite of passage for Orlando . Prior to it , his reasoning and ...
Página 97
... individual women have a hard time making their presence permanent in O'Connor's fiction , it may be due more to the social realities of O'Connor's time - the view that American men of the late 1940s and 1950s had of women - than to her ...
... individual women have a hard time making their presence permanent in O'Connor's fiction , it may be due more to the social realities of O'Connor's time - the view that American men of the late 1940s and 1950s had of women - than to her ...
Página 3
... individual parent in any school district by sending written reviews and lists of objections itemized by line and page . Though the political Left has not been nearly so efficiently orga- nized , organizations such as the Council on ...
... individual parent in any school district by sending written reviews and lists of objections itemized by line and page . Though the political Left has not been nearly so efficiently orga- nized , organizations such as the Council on ...
Conteúdo
FALL 1993 NUMBER | 1 |
The Importance of Point of View in Fiction | 16 |
On Gender Art | 22 |
Direitos autorais | |
10 outras seções não mostradas
Outras edições - Ver todos
Termos e frases comuns
accept action American Anne appears argues Association become believe called Carver characters College complete considered continued create criticism cultural death describes English essay example experience fact feelings female feminine feminist feminist criticism fiction final follows gender Holocaust human husband imagination implied important Indian individual interest interpretation issue James John language League literary literature lives look male Mary masculine meaning Merrow mind mother narrative narrator Native nature never notes novel object offers organic poem point of view political position present printing published question readers reading reality relations relationship reveals role says seems sense sexual short social society speaks story structure style suggests teaching tell theory things traditional turn understand University values voice woman women writing written York young