CEA Critic, Volume 56Department of English, Texas A & M University, 1993 |
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Página 45
... women has not been uncovered . They claim that patriarchal culture has learned to tolerate , however grudgingly , the woman artist , although it still mistrusts woman as critic because the practice of literary criticism requires ...
... women has not been uncovered . They claim that patriarchal culture has learned to tolerate , however grudgingly , the woman artist , although it still mistrusts woman as critic because the practice of literary criticism requires ...
Página 87
... women characters because he understands them : " I feel I know some- thing about women , and I felt I could be deeply sympathetic , and involved , in taking a woman's point of view " ( " What We Talk About " 165 ) . In discussing the ...
... women characters because he understands them : " I feel I know some- thing about women , and I felt I could be deeply sympathetic , and involved , in taking a woman's point of view " ( " What We Talk About " 165 ) . In discussing the ...
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... women's lives " in the same way . Since Little Women was written during the American Civil War , I asked my husband , Bob - a university professor - to poll the students in his Civil War and Reconstruction course . Most of Bob's ...
... women's lives " in the same way . Since Little Women was written during the American Civil War , I asked my husband , Bob - a university professor - to poll the students in his Civil War and Reconstruction course . Most of Bob's ...
Conteúdo
FALL 1993 NUMBER | 1 |
The Importance of Point of View in Fiction | 16 |
On Gender Art | 22 |
Direitos autorais | |
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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