Keyword [Leslie marmon] Result: 1 - 20 | Page: 1 of 2 |
1. | Homing In And Reconstructing Native American Identity |
2. | An Analysis Of Spatial Narrative In Ceremony |
3. | An Ecocritical Analysis Of Leslie Marmon Silko’s Ceremony |
4. | Tayo’s Journey Of Self-realization-Interpretation Of Leslie Marmon Silko’s Ceremony From Deep Ecology Perspective |
5. | A Study Of The Ecological Thought In Leslie Marmon Siiko's Works |
6. | The Harmonious Home For Indian American Women |
7. | American Indian double-consciousness: W. E. B. Du Bois's concept translated in Leslie Marmon Silko's 'Ceremony' |
8. | Multispecies thinking from Alexander von Humboldt to Leslie Marmon Silko: Intercultural communication toward cosmopolitics |
9. | Unraveling the nationalist or traditionalist critique: towards a postcolonial rereading of leslie marmon silko's ceremony |
10. | How Environment and Natural Space Reflect Cultural Power Struggles in the Novels of Leslie Marmon Silko |
11. | Domestic geographies: Neo-domestic American fiction (Leslie Marmon Silko, Toni Morrison, Barbara Kingsolver, Chang-rae Lee, Don DeLillo) |
12. | Speaking with divine authority: Maternal discourse in the works of Maxine Hong Kingston, Toni Morrison, and Leslie Marmon Silko |
13. | The emergent self: Identity, trauma, and the neo-gothic in 'The Woman Warrior', 'Comfort Woman', 'Beloved', and 'Ceremony' (Maxine Hong Kingston, Nora Okja Keller, Toni Morrison, Leslie Marmon Silko) |
14. | Women on the edge: Autobiographical selves and the lure of the boundary in twentieth-century United States literature (Maxine Hong Kingston, Gloria Anzaldua, Zora Neale Hurston, Leslie Marmon Silko) |
15. | Leslie Marmon Silko: Beyond borders |
16. | Trickster shows the way: Humor, resiliency, and growth in modern Native American literature (Sherman Alexie, Leslie Marmon Silko, Louise Erdrich) |
17. | Digitally exploring Tayo's world: Using hypertextual tools to teach Leslie Marmon Silko's 'Ceremony' |
18. | People -as -garbage: A metaphor we live by. Storytelling as composting in six novels: Toni Morrison's 'The Bluest Eye', Margaret Laurence's 'The Diviners', Leslie Marmon Silko's 'Ceremony', Marilynne Robinson's 'Housekeeping', Jane Smiley's 'A Thousand |
19. | Storied voices in Native American texts: Harry Robinson, Thomas King, James Welch and Leslie Marmon Silko |
20. | Reworlding the word: Contemporary Native American novelists map the third space (Gerald Vizenor, Leslie Marmon Silko, Linda Hogan) |
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