MaComère, Volume 4Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 2001 |
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Page 72
... narrator . Far from having any privileged overview , the narrator is at pains to show the reader the workings and the inevitable limits of her reading of the story . This reflexive device is not actually specifically postmodern - it has ...
... narrator . Far from having any privileged overview , the narrator is at pains to show the reader the workings and the inevitable limits of her reading of the story . This reflexive device is not actually specifically postmodern - it has ...
Page 75
... narrator is clearly highly critical of the political situation that Puerto Rico finds itself in vis - à - vis the United States . The text also reveals an awareness of the African influence in Puerto Rican culture where the narrator ...
... narrator is clearly highly critical of the political situation that Puerto Rico finds itself in vis - à - vis the United States . The text also reveals an awareness of the African influence in Puerto Rican culture where the narrator ...
Page 78
... narrator definitely is . She begins by satirizing the narrow , traditional , prejudices of Malén's neighbours both male and female , who describe Malén as : “ Esa mujer tan indecente paseándose desnuda por el pasillo de noche , un ...
... narrator definitely is . She begins by satirizing the narrow , traditional , prejudices of Malén's neighbours both male and female , who describe Malén as : “ Esa mujer tan indecente paseándose desnuda por el pasillo de noche , un ...
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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