A literary critique is presented wherein the author examines the novel “A Complicated Kindness,” by Miriam Toew as a restorying of the Russian Mennonite diaspora. The prominence of the diaspora in Canadian Mennonite discourse is referenced, and the personal narrative approach used in Toew’s novel is discussed as a method of connecting readers to the Mennonite experience
Russian Mennonite immigrants who settled south central Kansas in the late 19th century and their des...
What Russian Mennonite child has not heard the stories of the massive migration from Russia to the N...
Drawing on the tradition of both the Bildungsroman and the Künstlerroman, Miriam Toews’s A Complicat...
One theory in educational research holds that humans are storytelling organisms who, individually an...
Rudy Wiebe (b. 1934) and Miriam Toews (b. 1964) embody two generations of Mennonite writing in Canad...
This essay employs the art of narrative inquiry to explore points of convergence and divergence betw...
Review of Rewriting the Break Event: Mennonites and Migration in Canadian Literature by Robert Zacha...
Because Mennonite communities have traditionally valued religious conformity and ethnic solidarity ...
This qualitative case study grounds theoretical notions of diaspora in personal accounts of Russian ...
Without a doubt, the Bolshevik Revolution altered the course of world history. Millions of lives wer...
Mennonites have a strong and well-recognized tradition of being conscientious objectors and pacifist...
The story of Russian Mennonite conscientious objectors (hereafter COs) is probably not well-known. I...
Women Talking is Canadian writer Miriam Toews’ seventh novel. She has also written a memoir about he...
Even as certain Canadian Mennonite writers objectify (and so appear to threaten, and even subvert) t...
The stories of women\u27s religious lives are essential to understanding religion. This thesis recor...
Russian Mennonite immigrants who settled south central Kansas in the late 19th century and their des...
What Russian Mennonite child has not heard the stories of the massive migration from Russia to the N...
Drawing on the tradition of both the Bildungsroman and the Künstlerroman, Miriam Toews’s A Complicat...
One theory in educational research holds that humans are storytelling organisms who, individually an...
Rudy Wiebe (b. 1934) and Miriam Toews (b. 1964) embody two generations of Mennonite writing in Canad...
This essay employs the art of narrative inquiry to explore points of convergence and divergence betw...
Review of Rewriting the Break Event: Mennonites and Migration in Canadian Literature by Robert Zacha...
Because Mennonite communities have traditionally valued religious conformity and ethnic solidarity ...
This qualitative case study grounds theoretical notions of diaspora in personal accounts of Russian ...
Without a doubt, the Bolshevik Revolution altered the course of world history. Millions of lives wer...
Mennonites have a strong and well-recognized tradition of being conscientious objectors and pacifist...
The story of Russian Mennonite conscientious objectors (hereafter COs) is probably not well-known. I...
Women Talking is Canadian writer Miriam Toews’ seventh novel. She has also written a memoir about he...
Even as certain Canadian Mennonite writers objectify (and so appear to threaten, and even subvert) t...
The stories of women\u27s religious lives are essential to understanding religion. This thesis recor...
Russian Mennonite immigrants who settled south central Kansas in the late 19th century and their des...
What Russian Mennonite child has not heard the stories of the massive migration from Russia to the N...
Drawing on the tradition of both the Bildungsroman and the Künstlerroman, Miriam Toews’s A Complicat...