MaComère, Volume 1Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 2001 |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-3 sur 17
Page 53
... British or North American . Instead of listening to my order , they listened to my accent and strained to place it . I used to have to repeat the order twice , even thrice . When I was eating I used to catch them looking at me with ...
... British or North American . Instead of listening to my order , they listened to my accent and strained to place it . I used to have to repeat the order twice , even thrice . When I was eating I used to catch them looking at me with ...
Page 165
... British gentleman , however , differs from mimicking a British lady . British men were masters of the empire ; British women were their wives , subject to coverture , and generally lacking economic and sexual freedom . As entrepreneurs ...
... British gentleman , however , differs from mimicking a British lady . British men were masters of the empire ; British women were their wives , subject to coverture , and generally lacking economic and sexual freedom . As entrepreneurs ...
Page 167
... British and creole societies , Antoinette and Anna find themselves uniquely placeless . This multiple exile may explain the difficult position of Julia's mother in my reading : she embodies the colony and yet is firmly linked to the ...
... British and creole societies , Antoinette and Anna find themselves uniquely placeless . This multiple exile may explain the difficult position of Julia's mother in my reading : she embodies the colony and yet is firmly linked to the ...
Table des matières
Women of Colour at the Barricades | 8 |
Creative Works | 17 |
Kings Street | 23 |
Droits d'auteur | |
11 autres sections non affichées
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
African American appeared become begins Beryl body born British called Caribbean characters child collection colonial coming connection continue Creole critical cultural dance dark daughter death desire discourse English exile experience eyes face father feel female gender girl give Haitian hand identity images important Julia language learned leave linguistic literary literature live London look male Mayotte meaning memory Miss mother move never notes novel oppression person poem political position possibility present published question racial relations resistance sense sexual silence slave social society song space speak spirit story Studies subjectivity symbol talk tell things Tituba tongue translation turn understand University voice West Indian woman women writers writing written York young