MaComère, Volume 4Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 2001 |
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Page 120
... ( Melville 148-149 ) Moreover , the extreme deterioration of this city is accompanied by a moral decay : the people steal shamelessly from each other , and their physical health is as degraded as their town . Melville's choice of language ...
... ( Melville 148-149 ) Moreover , the extreme deterioration of this city is accompanied by a moral decay : the people steal shamelessly from each other , and their physical health is as degraded as their town . Melville's choice of language ...
Page 121
... Melville's work . Indeed , within the text of Melville's The Migration of Ghosts there is a penetration of conventional perceptions as to the organization of space and linearity within the text , and the use of language to reify ...
... Melville's work . Indeed , within the text of Melville's The Migration of Ghosts there is a penetration of conventional perceptions as to the organization of space and linearity within the text , and the use of language to reify ...
Page 158
... Melville's intertextuality involves building on and complicating established Caribbean poetics to celebrate multi - histories for which reality is already assumed . In her texts , Melville engages vigorously with Wilson Harris's ...
... Melville's intertextuality involves building on and complicating established Caribbean poetics to celebrate multi - histories for which reality is already assumed . In her texts , Melville engages vigorously with Wilson Harris's ...
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