In our current world, questions of the transnational, location, land, and identity confront us with a particular insistence. The Grammar of Identity is a lively and wide-ranging study of twentieth-century fiction that examines how writers across nearly a hundred years have confronted these issues. Circumventing the divisions of conventional categories, the book examines writers from both the colonial and postcolonial, the modern and postmodern eras, putting together writers who might not normally inhabit the same critical space: Joseph Conrad, Caryl Phillips, Salman Rushdie, Charlotte Bronte, Jean Rhys, Anne Michaels, W. G. Sebald, Nadine Gordimer, and J. M. Coetzee. In this guise, the book itself becomes a journey of discovery, exploring t...
This dissertation focuses on the diasporic post-colonial British writers and British as they negotia...
This paper introduces some of the broad themes of the workshop. Identity discourses are ubiquitous i...
This text seeks to rethink the relationship between literature and the gendered construction of nati...
When one embarks on reading any of the novels J.M. Coetzee has produced over the last twenty-five ye...
With the destabilization of political and cultural boundaries between peoples and nations, the conce...
This thesis examines the ways transnational identities are created in three works of fiction: Jean R...
Using a theoretical approach and a critical summary, combining the perspectives in the postcolonial ...
There is no home in this world for colonising peoples, but the desire for a place or a state to call...
Thesis (Ph.D. (English))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2004.This thesis is premised ...
English summary The main objective of this thesis is to present some key issues relevant for postcol...
The Farming of Bones deals with issues surrounding the dynamic connections between identity and boun...
T his paper deals with the reconsideration of the concept of identity from the postcolonial studies ...
Names are a social connector, symbolizing personal identity, familial relationships and ancestry. Wh...
Softcover, 17x24How do we see ourselves? How do we see each other? Questions of identity feature lar...
The ambition of this issue of Portal is to reach across the methodological boundaries of history, po...
This dissertation focuses on the diasporic post-colonial British writers and British as they negotia...
This paper introduces some of the broad themes of the workshop. Identity discourses are ubiquitous i...
This text seeks to rethink the relationship between literature and the gendered construction of nati...
When one embarks on reading any of the novels J.M. Coetzee has produced over the last twenty-five ye...
With the destabilization of political and cultural boundaries between peoples and nations, the conce...
This thesis examines the ways transnational identities are created in three works of fiction: Jean R...
Using a theoretical approach and a critical summary, combining the perspectives in the postcolonial ...
There is no home in this world for colonising peoples, but the desire for a place or a state to call...
Thesis (Ph.D. (English))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2004.This thesis is premised ...
English summary The main objective of this thesis is to present some key issues relevant for postcol...
The Farming of Bones deals with issues surrounding the dynamic connections between identity and boun...
T his paper deals with the reconsideration of the concept of identity from the postcolonial studies ...
Names are a social connector, symbolizing personal identity, familial relationships and ancestry. Wh...
Softcover, 17x24How do we see ourselves? How do we see each other? Questions of identity feature lar...
The ambition of this issue of Portal is to reach across the methodological boundaries of history, po...
This dissertation focuses on the diasporic post-colonial British writers and British as they negotia...
This paper introduces some of the broad themes of the workshop. Identity discourses are ubiquitous i...
This text seeks to rethink the relationship between literature and the gendered construction of nati...