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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
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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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LaRubia-Prado, Francisco – International Journal for Talent Development and Creativity, 2015
This paper explores a creative interpretation of D. H. Lawrence's novel "St. Mawr." Throughout the centuries, and across cultures, the presence of a distinctive horse (or horses) in a literary text--and more recently in films -- results in what appears to be an unvarying outcome: the restoration of equilibrium and wholeness in situations…
Descriptors: Authors, Novels, Creativity, Animals
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Sheahan, Annmarie; Dallacqua, Ashley K. – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2020
Despite ongoing and prolific critical scholarship arguing for the widening of the secondary language arts curriculum, many practicing teachers are required or encouraged to teach a curriculum dominated by canonical texts. This is often the case at schools with highly diverse students whose varied cultural and linguistic backgrounds have…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Secondary School Students, Teaching Methods, English Literature
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Adhikari, Manahari – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2014
This essay examines how Virginia Woolf uses writing as a tool to locate sites of negations, such as women's exclusion from places of power and knowledge, and to expose negative essentializing that permeates patriarchal structure in "A Room of One's Own." Whereas scholarship on the book has explored a wide range of issues including sex,…
Descriptors: Novels, Sex Stereotypes, Females, Gender Differences
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Victor Malo-Juvera – English Journal, 2017
This article will share a postcolonial analysis of three widely taught texts that the author has used to introduce both secondary English language arts classes and college students in multicultural young adult literature courses to postcolonial criticism: Sherman Alexie's "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian," Gene Luen…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Multicultural Education, Postcolonialism, Novels
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Curwood, Jen Scott – Children's Literature in Education, 2013
This literary analysis examines constructions of normalcy and disability within contemporary young adult literature, including "Jerk," "California" (Friesen, 2008), "Marcelo in the Real World" (Stork, 2009), and "Five Flavors of Dumb" (John, 2010). As recent winners of the Schneider Family Book Award from the American Library Association, these…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Awards, Adolescent Literature, Literary Criticism
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Kanost, Laura – Hispania, 2010
Francisco Rojas Gonzalez's 1944 novel "La negra Angustias" is recognized as the only novel of the Mexican Revolution that features a black woman military officer. Critics have observed that, although this semi-biographical novel portrays Angustias as a gender nonconformist who seeks justice for women and the poor, the conclusion ushers…
Descriptors: Females, Novels, Mexicans, Blacks
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McDowell, Kelly – Children's Literature in Education, 2002
Presents a critique of Mildred D. Taylor's "Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry" with regard to its positioning of the child subject. Proposes that the novel contrasts classic works of children's fiction by following a trajectory of child agency, which is enabled through the novel's racial specificity. Discusses the role of historical…
Descriptors: Black Literature, Characterization, Childrens Literature, Discourse Analysis
Taxel, Joel – Interchange on Educational Policy, 1981
Textbooks and children's literature tend to mirror society. A study was made of race and class bias in 32 children's novels about the American Revolution published between 1889 and 1976. The treatment of blacks, women, and lower-class groups not only reflects but also perpetuates bias. (JN)
Descriptors: Black Stereotypes, Childhood Attitudes, Childrens Literature, Elementary Secondary Education