MaComère, Volume 3Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 2000 |
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Page 97
... understand fully themselves and each other . It is at this level of very human fallibility that the reader connects with the text and begins to understand where literature stops and revolutionary struggle starts . One of the first ...
... understand fully themselves and each other . It is at this level of very human fallibility that the reader connects with the text and begins to understand where literature stops and revolutionary struggle starts . One of the first ...
Page 134
... understand it as such ) . Yet , at a second level of understanding , it foretells that girls will not allow lovers to deceive them anymore . At a third level , the story is also a warning about sexual relations and abduction ( for ...
... understand it as such ) . Yet , at a second level of understanding , it foretells that girls will not allow lovers to deceive them anymore . At a third level , the story is also a warning about sexual relations and abduction ( for ...
Page 166
... understand , or that she doesn't really want him to understand who she is ? The end of the novel leaves the readers with an endless , frustrating feeling , for the protagonist is searching for somebody to whom she never gets close . As ...
... understand , or that she doesn't really want him to understand who she is ? The end of the novel leaves the readers with an endless , frustrating feeling , for the protagonist is searching for somebody to whom she never gets close . As ...
Table des matières
Carole Boyce Davies | 8 |
Hillhouse | 26 |
Velma Pollard | 30 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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