MaComère, Volume 4Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 2001 |
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Page 72
... notion which for them is " no more ignorable then is the air we breathe ; in a sense , it is the social and cultural air we breathe " ( viii ) . They consider postmodernity to have opened the way to " cultural studies " that ...
... notion which for them is " no more ignorable then is the air we breathe ; in a sense , it is the social and cultural air we breathe " ( viii ) . They consider postmodernity to have opened the way to " cultural studies " that ...
Page 77
... notion of that which is typical while the frequent references to French home - cooking and customs emphasize again how the world which Carola sees corresponds to her expectations . Many of these expectations are based on what she has ...
... notion of that which is typical while the frequent references to French home - cooking and customs emphasize again how the world which Carola sees corresponds to her expectations . Many of these expectations are based on what she has ...
Page 80
... notion of solidarity and at the same time their feminist beliefs . Ultimately , I would suggest , however , that the story addresses the notion that patriarchal society still punishes women who step out of line . Carola likens Paul to ...
... notion of solidarity and at the same time their feminist beliefs . Ultimately , I would suggest , however , that the story addresses the notion that patriarchal society still punishes women who step out of line . Carola likens Paul to ...
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