MaComère, Volume 4Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 2001 |
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Page 88
... lives are lived at a trivialized , even perilously self - indulgent level ? Could it be guilt or compensation ? " ( 111 ) . In contrast , Lucy's attitude towards the weather is due in part to the fact that she originates from a drought ...
... lives are lived at a trivialized , even perilously self - indulgent level ? Could it be guilt or compensation ? " ( 111 ) . In contrast , Lucy's attitude towards the weather is due in part to the fact that she originates from a drought ...
Page 153
... lives [ Haitian lives , Dominican lives , American lives , human lives ] are precious too " ( 66 ) . Edwidge Danticat delivers a clear message in her second novel that " We are our own testaments " ( 21 ) . We must not end our lives ...
... lives [ Haitian lives , Dominican lives , American lives , human lives ] are precious too " ( 66 ) . Edwidge Danticat delivers a clear message in her second novel that " We are our own testaments " ( 21 ) . We must not end our lives ...
Page 203
... lives . At times , Nunez's focus on Rosa and Zuela and their renewed friendship seems too deliberate . The reader is kept from full involvement in the intimate details of the lives of these characters by a narrative distance . Elsewhere ...
... lives . At times , Nunez's focus on Rosa and Zuela and their renewed friendship seems too deliberate . The reader is kept from full involvement in the intimate details of the lives of these characters by a narrative distance . Elsewhere ...
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African American become beginning body called Caribbean Celia characters child collection colonial color comes como connection Cuba cultural daughter describes diaspora Dominican English Erzulie experience explores eyes father feel female fiction final forced girl Haitian hand head idea identity Indian ISBN island land language leave Literature lives London look Lourdes Lucy Mariah meaning Melville memory mother mujer narrative narrator never notion novel painting past physical Pilar poems political present Puerto Rico question reader relationship ritual river role seems sense sexual social society space story Studies talk tell things turned understand University voice West woman women writing York young