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Keyword [Gloria Naylor]
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1. Inheritance And Development: A Comparative Study On Their Eyes Were Watching God And Mama Day
2. On Magical Realism In Gloria Naylor's Mama Day
3. The Quest For Self-Identity-A Study Of Gloria Naylor's Linden Hills And Mama Day
4. Black Feminism In Gloria Naylor's Quartet
5. Dilemma And Survival Of Blacks In Gloria Naylor's Brewster Place Novels: An Approach From Double-consciousness And Womanism
6. A Study Of Gloria Naylor’s Utopian Thoughts
7. Female Agency In Gloria Naylor’s Mama Day
8. Masculinities Of Black Men In Gloria Naylor’s Mama Day
9. Reconstruction Of Gender Relations In Gloria Naylor’s Brewster Place Novels From The Perspective Of Postfeminism
10. Africans’ Clinging To Willow Springs’s Traditional Culture In Mama Day
11. A Utopian Reading Of Gloria Naylor's Bailey's Café
12. On The Construction Of African American Cultural Identity In Mama Day From The Perspective Of Stuart Hall's Diaspora Theory
13. A Study On Female Characters In The Women Of Brewster Place From The Perspective Of Existentialist Feminism
14. Cultural Conflicts And Integration In Mama Day From The Perspectives Of Tradition And Modernity
15. 'Hegemony of the spirit': Black women's resistance and healing through African diasporic 'counter cultures of modernity' in selected African Caribbean and African American women's writing (Erna Brodber, Jamaica, Toni Cade Bambara, Gloria Naylor, Paule Mar
16. Dialogic discourse in terms of nature, race, and gender in fictions by William Faulkner, Eudora Welty, and Gloria Naylor
17. Progressive turns to the past: A new medium for African American and Chicano modern identity formation (Ana Castillo, Oscar Zeta Acosta, Gloria Naylor, Paule Marshall, Barbados)
18. 'Daughters of Zion': Spiritual power in Black womanist narrative (Zilpha Elaw, Virginia Broughton, Gloria Naylor, Gayl Jones, Octavia E. Butler)
19. The mark of 'Cane': A vernacular study of Jean Toomer's African-American pastoral in the narratives of Gloria Naylor, Ernest Gaines and Toni Morrison
20. 'Wholeness is no trifling matter': An intertextual study of Black women's psychic (dis)eases in novels by contemporary Pan-African women (Tsitsi Dangarembga, Gloria Naylor, Toni Cade Bambara, Simone Schwarz-Bart, Zimbabwe, Guadeloupe)
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