This study explores specific thematic pre-occupations in the works of selected eight women writers from two different geographical and cultural milieus (West Africa and Scotland) with a specific focus on similarities in which these writers use language as a means of exploring women's positions within their respective societies. The second layer of the study's enquiry lives within the realm of exploration of womanist discourse, as originally developed by Alice Walker, and a possibility of applying this discourse beyond African American and African shores, as a transracial and transcultural model for creating new readings of dramatic discourse by women writers who come from different generational, racial, cultural and geographical environment...
This is a study of gender ideology in African popular literature published from the seventies onward...
Presenting a vexing problem for female aspirations to authorship, women and orality have been so clo...
African-American women have been inappropriately and unduly, stereotyped in various contrasting imag...
This study explores specific thematic pre-occupations in the works of selected eight women writers f...
My dissertation is a linguistic/literary analysis of three contemporary black women's novels: Alice ...
Ngugi wa Thiong’o’s Weep Not, Child may be read as a novel about the anti-colonial strife of the Mau...
Speaking for or about others has featured consistently in current feminist debates as it is becoming...
The “voices” of women writers in the development of literary studies are still crucial issues for wo...
\u27I could speak until tomorrow.\u27 (Utterance by a woman performer, used by Karin Barber as the t...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation examines the transmission of cultural value...
In the wake of the feminism debate, socio-ethnological studies on the place of women and femininity ...
With the rise of nationaism, independence and the quest for a national identity, one phenomenon of p...
This dissertation examines the place of difference in black women\u27s writing of the African diaspo...
This study explores the notion of female cultural difference in the context of dominant patriarchal ...
The present paper focuses on the tradition of women’s circumsicion in the African tribe of Olinkan i...
This is a study of gender ideology in African popular literature published from the seventies onward...
Presenting a vexing problem for female aspirations to authorship, women and orality have been so clo...
African-American women have been inappropriately and unduly, stereotyped in various contrasting imag...
This study explores specific thematic pre-occupations in the works of selected eight women writers f...
My dissertation is a linguistic/literary analysis of three contemporary black women's novels: Alice ...
Ngugi wa Thiong’o’s Weep Not, Child may be read as a novel about the anti-colonial strife of the Mau...
Speaking for or about others has featured consistently in current feminist debates as it is becoming...
The “voices” of women writers in the development of literary studies are still crucial issues for wo...
\u27I could speak until tomorrow.\u27 (Utterance by a woman performer, used by Karin Barber as the t...
grantor: University of TorontoThe dissertation examines the transmission of cultural value...
In the wake of the feminism debate, socio-ethnological studies on the place of women and femininity ...
With the rise of nationaism, independence and the quest for a national identity, one phenomenon of p...
This dissertation examines the place of difference in black women\u27s writing of the African diaspo...
This study explores the notion of female cultural difference in the context of dominant patriarchal ...
The present paper focuses on the tradition of women’s circumsicion in the African tribe of Olinkan i...
This is a study of gender ideology in African popular literature published from the seventies onward...
Presenting a vexing problem for female aspirations to authorship, women and orality have been so clo...
African-American women have been inappropriately and unduly, stereotyped in various contrasting imag...