Learning from Difference: Teaching Morrison, Twain, Ellison, and EliotOhio State University Press, 1999 - 219 pages |
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Page 11
... passage near the end of Jazz , Morrison sketches a brief genealogy both for this culturally powerful model of independent , masculine identity and for the " rogue " alterna- tives she explores in her own fiction . " I started out ...
... passage near the end of Jazz , Morrison sketches a brief genealogy both for this culturally powerful model of independent , masculine identity and for the " rogue " alterna- tives she explores in her own fiction . " I started out ...
Page 45
... passage as an indentured servant . Sethe also listens to Amy talk again and again of velvet , which Amy describes as " like the world was just born . Clean and new and so smooth . The velvet I seen was brown , but in Boston they got all ...
... passage as an indentured servant . Sethe also listens to Amy talk again and again of velvet , which Amy describes as " like the world was just born . Clean and new and so smooth . The velvet I seen was brown , but in Boston they got all ...
Page 170
... passage " on Tiresias from Ovid's Metamorphoses for its " great anthropological interest ” in this regard . The passage suggests that Tiresias's blindness and his powers of prophecy may be more closely related to each other than they ...
... passage " on Tiresias from Ovid's Metamorphoses for its " great anthropological interest ” in this regard . The passage suggests that Tiresias's blindness and his powers of prophecy may be more closely related to each other than they ...
Table des matières
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
CHAPTER I | 63 |
Learning from Invisibility and Blindness | 100 |
Droits d'auteur | |
4 autres sections non affichées
Expressions et termes fréquents
aesthetic African American culture African American literature American literature American romance Amy's articulate attempt attention Beloved canonical challenge characters critical cultural power democracy Denver difference discourse dominant culture Eliot's note Eliot's poem Ellison's novel escape European American example experience Faulkner's fear feel focus freedom gender heroism Huck and Jim Huck's Huckleberry Finn ideals identity imagine interaction ironic irony jazz Jim's story language less loss middle class modern modernist moral Morrison's novel mother multiculturalism narrator negative freedom negotiation Norton's pathos and dignity perhaps poem's political position positive freedom possible potential promise protagonist questions raft Ralph Ellison readers reading recognize relationship remade represented responsibility rhetorical seems sense Sethe Sethe's Shadow and Act slave social society stanza suggests T. S. Eliot tions Tiresias Tom's tradition transference transforming Trueblood ture Twain's novel unspeakable vision Waste Land Wheatstraw white supremacy writing
Références à ce livre
The Identifying Fictions of Toni Morrison: Modernist Authenticity and ... J. Duvall Aucun aperçu disponible - 2000 |
Literatur als kulturelle Ökologie: zur kulturellen Funktion imaginativer ... Hubert Zapf Affichage d'extraits - 2002 |