Crisis and Creativity in the New Literatures in EnglishGeoffrey V. Davis, Hena Maes-Jelinek Rodopi, 1990 - 529 pages |
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Page 85
... land in me you know " - and the " you " he addresses throughout is protean , slithering from shape to shape , from archetypal lover , to the old land , to the new land , and finally to Kibele , the most ancient Phrygian goddess of the ...
... land in me you know " - and the " you " he addresses throughout is protean , slithering from shape to shape , from archetypal lover , to the old land , to the new land , and finally to Kibele , the most ancient Phrygian goddess of the ...
Page 298
... land . Imagine me well . ( p . 13 ) This duality suggests an explanation for the narrator's name : the Law can be considered as the allegorical embodiment of two different " laws , " 11 the law of empire ( grafted artificially on a ...
... land . Imagine me well . ( p . 13 ) This duality suggests an explanation for the narrator's name : the Law can be considered as the allegorical embodiment of two different " laws , " 11 the law of empire ( grafted artificially on a ...
Page 433
... Land Wars . Be that as it may , it suggests that the origins of New Zealand fiction were intimately bound up with those bloody and indecisive battles between the Maori who wanted to stop further colonial incursion into their territories ...
... Land Wars . Be that as it may , it suggests that the origins of New Zealand fiction were intimately bound up with those bloody and indecisive battles between the Maori who wanted to stop further colonial incursion into their territories ...
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