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  1. 1021

    As estratégias discursivas e a evolução do sujeito poético feminino: de Adélia Prado a Maria Lúcia Dal Farra by Teresa Cabañas

    Published 2010-01-01
    “…The intention is set on observing how the writers’ discursive strategies, in addition to revitalizing the local poetry code, suggest changes to the status of historical and social condition of female agents producing poetry. …”
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  2. 1022

    Correlation Analysis of Japanese Literature and Psychotherapy Effects Based on an Equation Diagnosis Algorithm by Zhang Tingting

    Published 2022-01-01
    “…On the basis of inheriting the classical aesthetic orientation of Japanese literature, contemporary Japanese literature changes the creative methods of traditional Japanese writers, strives to transcend the national limitations of Japanese literature, and strives to capture literary materials with a “modern feel.” …”
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  3. 1023

    From Dickens’s Theatrical Performance to Contemporary post Dickensian Narrative and Artistic Performance (Acker, Ackroyd, Waters and Rushdie) by Georges Letissier

    Published 2010-06-01
    “…Dickens’s invention of public readings may be seen as an innovative method to advertise literary production, but it is also a tangible illustration of the type of boundary crossing valued by postmodern writers. With Dickens, who in this respect is very much in the Sternean-Shandian vein, theatrical performance is both inside the text (e.g. the parodic staging of Hamlet in Great Expectations) and outside the text, when dramatized versions of his novels are specially written to be acted out. …”
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  4. 1024

    La mémoire des villes dans l’Espagne du Siècle d’Or : Oublier pour mieux reconstruire by Lidwine Linares

    Published 2018-02-01
    “…A new phenomenon can be seen in Spain in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries : the appearance and multiplication of local chronicles. The writers intended to trace in them the roots of places – region, diocese, city, etc. – and to write history and past glories, participating in the formation and maintenance of a collective memory. …”
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  5. 1025

    L’hispaniste Antoine de Latour (1808-1881) by Manuel Bruña Cuevas

    Published 2013-06-01
    “…In Spain, Latour was, therefore, a socially well-placed foreigner: he could help the Spanish writers to get the patronage of the Duke as well as publish articles about their work in the Parisian journals.…”
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  6. 1026

    Debating Igbo conversion to Christianity: a critical indigenous view by F. Hale

    Published 2006-12-01
    “…Within the genre of the novel, West African writers like the Ibgos Chinua Achebe, John Munonye, and T. …”
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  7. 1027

    “We wove a web in childhood” Angria Revisited: A. S. Byatt’s The Game by Jane Silvey

    Published 2010-03-01
    “…Many women writers have been fascinated with Charlotte Brontë’s life and their admiration for her work has infected their own creative writing. …”
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  8. 1028

    Kay Boyle and Richard Wright, 1948-1960: A “Friendship Forever” in “a difficult time” by Toru KIUCHI

    Published 2013-06-01
    “…The lives and activist careers of the two writers—who both fought against racial prejudices and for more social justice in the United States—often intersected, as in 1937, for instance, when they became involved with Nancy Cunard in the defense of the “Scottsboro Boys.” …”
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  9. 1029

    The creation of Serbian codes (1827-1865): Memories of the contemporaries by Drakić Gordana M., Stanković Uroš N.

    Published 2024-01-01
    “…Each of these divisions contain memoir-writers's notes in relation with the codes belonging to respective fields of law. …”
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  10. 1030

    Were It a New-Made World: Hawthorne, Melville and the Unmasking of America by Michael Broek

    Published 2010-02-01
    “…Utilizing Ernest Gellner and Benedict Anderson’s definition of “nationalism,” this article concerns American nationalism and aesthetics and argues that Hawthorne and Melville were among the first American imaginative writers to challenge the myth of American Exceptionalism in terms of their aesthetic operations, insofar as Hawthorne’s sense of ambiguity and Melville’s sense of multiple perspectives challenges the validity of any single monological narrative of national identity. …”
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  11. 1031

    Imagining Queer Chican@s in the Post-Borderlands by T. Jackie Cuevas

    Published 2013-06-01
    “…This paper reveals how the tension of choosing between ethnic solidarity and non-normative gender/sexual identity continues to trouble Chican@/Latin@ writers, as evidenced in Felicia Luna Lemus’ novel Like Son (2007). …”
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  12. 1032

    The Rhetoric of Travel and Exploration : a New “Nature” and the Other in Early to mid- Eighteenth-Century English Travel Collections by Matthew Binney

    Published 2015-07-01
    “…The aim of this paper is to examine the shifting spirit and rhetoric of English travel collections between the end of the 16th century and the early 18th century. Whereas writers like Hakluyt, the Churchills or Harris tended to enfold peoples and nations within the determinate telos of Christendom, Campell’s, Green’s and Button’s travel collections are characterized by a new discourse which draws upon the work of Hobbes, Locke and Spinoza. …”
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  13. 1033

    A. J. Greimas in Jakarta: Essay on Story Structure by Richard Skinner

    Published 2021-04-01
    “…Greimas in Jakarta”, I use Greimas’ model and apply it to stories, novellas and novels by writers as diverse as Alice Munro, Andre Dubus, Han Kang and Julian Barnes in order to explore the narrative structure of those texts. …”
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  14. 1034

    Teksty modlitw eucharystycznych w świetle najnowszych zasad pisowni słownictwa religijnego by Michał Machura

    Published 2013-11-01
    “…The Author admit that although the writers may use capital letter by emotional reasons, nevertheless, they should use this consciously and responsibly as to not to obliterate the differences of meaning between words.…”
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  15. 1035

    SIN IS A PERSON: SOME ONTOLOGICAL METAPHORS IN THE BIBLE by C. Owiredu

    Published 2021-06-01
    “…The use of these conceptual metaphors indicates that the writers of the selected biblical texts intended to project a deeper meaning of sin beyond the literal meaning of sin in daily language. …”
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  16. 1036

    Une collecte de complaintes criminelles en Occitanie by Xavier Vidal

    Published 2021-03-01
    “…The research has been focused on the work of folk song writers.
The results show us that, at least for a more recent period, an important place was given to the French language in the allover production of those songwriters. …”
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  17. 1037

    Filles et fils au prisme des journaux d’observation rédigés par leurs parents (Suisse romande, 1780-1820) by Sylvie Moret Petrini

    Published 2023-10-01
    “…Based on thirteen educational or observational diaries kept by middle-class parents from the French-speaking part of Switzerland between 1780 and 1820, this article analyses this writing practice and the way the writers speak about their children. And it starts from the very moment of birth and the announcement of the child's sex. …”
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  18. 1038

    WOMAN AND TECHNOLOGY: A STUDY ON GENDER PORTRAYAL OF A FEMALE CYBORG IN GHOST IN THE SHELL (2017) MOVIE by Pujo Sakti Nur Cahyo, Riyan Evrilia Suryaningtyas

    Published 2020-03-01
    “…Focusing on the analysis of narrative and non-narrative elements, this research seeks to reveal how the main character is portrayed as a female cyborg. As a result, the writers found that her shifting existence as a female cyborg in the movie is the representation of how women can be the subject by affiliating with technology. …”
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  19. 1039

    Economic and Symbolic Transmissions in Women’s Novels: Frances Burney, Jane Austen, Elizabeth Gaskell by Marie-Laure Massei-Chamayou

    Published 2024-03-01
    “…In A Room of One’s Own (1929), Virginia Woolf traces a fascinating genealogy of women writers from Aphra Behn to George Eliot, including Frances Burney and Jane Austen among others, to emphasize the power of influence in relation to their engagement with both fiction and economics. …”
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  20. 1040

    Du rêve à la réalité, l’espace américain des écrivains d’expression anglaise du Proche-Orient arabe by Jacqueline Jondot

    Published 2006-06-01
    “…A number of Arab writers in the English language of the first half of the 20th century left the Middle East, considering the space offered them was too limited, to go the United States, thinking it would offer them numberless (physical, intellectual, moral...) opportunities, only to find that their new reality was just as limited (limited by a foreign community, a foreign language, loss of sense of direction...). …”
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