Crisis and Creativity in the New Literatures in EnglishGeoffrey V. Davis, Hena Maes-Jelinek Rodopi, 1990 - 529 pages |
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Page 135
... fiction , for example the partial or temporary restriction of narrative point of view to perspectives provided by fictional characters , frequently result in the use of mixed codes which have no direct counterparts in the real world ...
... fiction , for example the partial or temporary restriction of narrative point of view to perspectives provided by fictional characters , frequently result in the use of mixed codes which have no direct counterparts in the real world ...
Page 147
... fiction . Rather , he has in his quest for a language appropriate to his aims as a writer - shaped a literary and artificial Creole which has the great advantage of not being tied down too closely to any one Caribbean community and ...
... fiction . Rather , he has in his quest for a language appropriate to his aims as a writer - shaped a literary and artificial Creole which has the great advantage of not being tied down too closely to any one Caribbean community and ...
Page 316
... fiction or non - fiction . Instead , let us examine briefly half - a - dozen books from among that splendid collection of fairly recent Australian texts which the librarian could , without too much difficulty , classify as autobiography ...
... fiction or non - fiction . Instead , let us examine briefly half - a - dozen books from among that splendid collection of fairly recent Australian texts which the librarian could , without too much difficulty , classify as autobiography ...
Contents
Mudrooroo NAROGIN Colin JOHNSON | 3 |
Wilson HARRIS | 9 |
Edward Kamau BRATHWAITE | 23 |
Copyright | |
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Aboriginal African alien appears attitudes Australian become beginning British called Caribbean century character colonial comes Commonwealth concern created Creole critical culture death described dominant English European example experience expression fact feel fiction fragments further give given hand human identity important Indian kind land language linguistic literary literature live London look major meaning mind mother narrative narrator nature never Ngugi wa Thiong'o novel original past person play poem poet poetry political present Press published reader reality recent reference seems seen sense social society speak story suggests symbol talk things tradition University voice West Western whole woman women writers writing written