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Showing 1 to 15 of 165 results Save | Export
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Lewis, Christopher T. – Hispania, 2020
Critics have commented on the power of writing--the biblical Word as creation--in Bernardo Carvalho's work. It forges connections through words between others who are out of place, searching for order in what appears to be chaos. However, this motif from both Genesis and the New Testament is also mediated by another creation narrative: the Big…
Descriptors: Novels, Biblical Literature, Authors, Christianity
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Moore, Tara – Children's Literature in Education, 2023
Students in the English Language Arts classroom have access to more author commentary than ever. While following authors on social media may deepen students' engagement with their assigned reading, it also threatens to subdue students' own interpretations of the authors' texts. This essay explains how educators can introduce basic aspects of…
Descriptors: Authors, Childrens Literature, Death, Literary Criticism
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Dumanli Kadizade, Esma; Anilan, Serhan Olcay – Eurasian Journal of Educational Research, 2020
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to draw reader's attention to the author-space relationship in order to fulfill the theoretical deficiency in terms of space-psychoanalysis in the light of qualitative data. Methods: Qualitative data analysis has been thought to be the best way to deal with the space-psychoanalysis relationship through…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Psychiatry, Childrens Literature, Copyrights
Tarc, Aparna Mishra – Routledge Research in Education, 2020
Critically analyzing the representation of pedagogy in the novels of J.M. Coetzee, this insightful text illustrates the author's profound conception of learning and personal development as something which takes place well beyond formal education. Bringing together critical and educational theory, "Pedagogy in the Novels of J.M. Coetzee"…
Descriptors: Instruction, Novels, Criticism, Individual Development
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Roberts, Peter – Open Review of Educational Research, 2018
Fyodor Dostoevsky's final novel, "The Brothers Karamazov," is one of the most influential works of the nineteenth century. To date, however, the potential value of the book for educationists has been largely ignored. This article addresses a key pedagogical theme in "The Brothers Karamazov," namely, the notion that 'love is a…
Descriptors: Russian Literature, Novels, Teaching Methods, Intimacy
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Getz, John; Hartlieb, Christina; Zhang, Abigail – Journal of Museum Education, 2020
Seeking to expand program offerings and cultivate repeat visitation at a mostly volunteer-run historic site, the Harriet Beecher Stowe House has partnered with retired Xavier University professor John Getz to lead a monthly literary discussion series, "Visiting 'Uncle Tom's Cabin'." This article presents how the series has created space…
Descriptors: Museums, Tourism, College Faculty, Literary Criticism
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Adedipe, Ademolawa Michael – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2018
The refutation and the obliteration of the modernist era in Canadian literature by Robert Kroetsch and reasserted by Glen Wilmott makes it imperative to look at highly experimental literary works in the first half of the 20th century in Canada. The purpose of this paper, thus is to make a case for the inclusion Irene Bird's "Waste…
Descriptors: Literature, Literary Criticism, Postmodernism, Foreign Countries
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Tahiri, Lindita; Muhaxheri, Nuran – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2021
This article applies Linguistic Criticism tools (Fowler, 1981) as methodological framework for interpreting narratological devices in fiction pointing out the relationship between the perspective of the narrator and the character. Fragments from a Kosovan contemporary novel by Mehmet Kraja (2005) are analysed focusing on the non-intrusive…
Descriptors: Fiction, Literary Criticism, Correlation, Novels
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Zare'e, Maedeh; Eslamieh, Razieh – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2016
This article is a Jamesonian study of Auster's "The New York Trilogy" in which one of Fredric Jameson's notions of postmodernism, pastiche, has been applied on three stories of the novel. This novel is one of Auster's outstanding postmodern works to which Jameson's theories of postmodernism, in particular, pastiche can be applicable.…
Descriptors: Postmodernism, Novels, Authors, Educational Theories
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Truman, Sarah E. – English in Australia, 2019
This paper is prompted by the author's experience as a researcher of English literary education in three different geographies over the past three years: Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia. Affect theory, as discussed in this paper, concerns atmospheres, surfaces, bodies, emotions, moods, vicinities and capacities. Drawing on affect theory,…
Descriptors: English Literature, Educational Researchers, Critical Theory, Race
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Okello, Wilson Kwamogi – Journal of College Student Development, 2020
Baby Suggs's sermon in the clearing to formerly enslaved Black folx offers readers an important anecdote about living in the afterlife of white supremacy (Hartman, 2007; Sharpe, 2016). Baby Suggs seemed to understand that the priority for survival and emancipation was loving one's flesh in a world where "yonder they do not love your…
Descriptors: Whites, Power Structure, Self Concept, Authors
Thornton, Megan – Hispania, 2014
Salvadoran writer Horacio Castellanos Moya offers a provocative example of postwar cynicism in his 1997 novel "El asco: Thomas Bernhard en San Salvador." By telling the story of Edgardo Vega, an emigrant who returns to El Salvador in the mid-1990s after living in Canada for eighteen years, "El asco" represents the mass exodus…
Descriptors: Authors, War, Novels, Spanish Literature
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Odacioglu, Mehmet Cem; Loi, Chek Kim; Çoban, Faddime – Online Submission, 2017
This study analyzes "City of Glass," a postmodernist detective novella (or anti-detective) of the "New York Trilogy" by Paul Auster in terms of postmodernist elements and techniques such as metafiction, parody, intertextuality, irony and like. In doing so, some information about Auster's life and the plot of the work are also…
Descriptors: Novels, Postmodernism, Authors, Literary Devices
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Youssef, Sayed Mohammed – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2016
William Golding has been identified as a nonconformist whose opinions always go contrary to what is customarily accepted or established. This is shown in all his novels, more specifically "The Inheritors", in which he defies long established opinions held by anthropologists, historians, archaeologists as well as many others about the…
Descriptors: Authors, Social Attitudes, Novels, Evolution
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Awan, Abdul Ghafoor; Andleeb, Shaista; Yasin, Farhat – Journal of Education and Practice, 2016
Mohsin Hamid is an exponent of postcolonial characterization and possesses a specific touch of today's hero in local Asian context. His pen is fluent on social fiction portraying Indo-Pak culture. Few writers could rise to the height of fame right with only a couple of preliminary works. Hamid secured it through his first novel "Moth…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Novels, Fiction, Asian Culture
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