MaComère, Volume 3Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 2000 |
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Page 97
... ironic mise en abyme of the figures of both writer and critic which , like most irony , runs the risk of being misinterpreted even though it stems , I think , from a deeply rooted ethical concern . In refusing to let literature be ...
... ironic mise en abyme of the figures of both writer and critic which , like most irony , runs the risk of being misinterpreted even though it stems , I think , from a deeply rooted ethical concern . In refusing to let literature be ...
Page 102
... irony here extends to Anthea's blindness about historical figures such as Solitud but also to her unquestioning acceptance of traditional periodization which causes her to exclude such figures . In light of the preceding discussion ...
... irony here extends to Anthea's blindness about historical figures such as Solitud but also to her unquestioning acceptance of traditional periodization which causes her to exclude such figures . In light of the preceding discussion ...
Page 104
... irony at work here and we cannot fail to notice its double edge : on the one hand , it is presumptuous on Condé's part to pretend having privileged access to Tituba's story ; on the other hand , a story will be told , emerging out of ...
... irony at work here and we cannot fail to notice its double edge : on the one hand , it is presumptuous on Condé's part to pretend having privileged access to Tituba's story ; on the other hand , a story will be told , emerging out of ...
Table des matières
Carole Boyce Davies | 8 |
Hillhouse | 26 |
Velma Pollard | 30 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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African American Anancy artists Association authority Barbara become Big Drum Caribbean characters child collection colonial comes Condé continues create Creole critic cultural Danticat daughter discourse dreams Edna English Erzulie ethnic experience expression Eyes face fact father feel female fiction figure French gender give going grandmother Haitian human identity important Indian interesting ISBN island Jamaica language leaves literature lives look male Margaret means Memory Miss mother narrative never notes novel offers person perspective poems political position practices present provides question reader refers relations relationship remember Seacole seems sense sister social society songs space story Studies suggests talk tell Télumée things traditional turn understand University voice wanted West woman women writers York young