This article explores the social demarcations between English and Creole cultural identities foregrounding race and gender in Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea. Set in a post Emancipation West Indian colony, the novel dramatizes the impossibility of mutual and creative exchanges between the fragments of a disintegrating world. When the novelbegins, the English hegemony is already structured and symbolically cast in the Caribbean islands in terms of patriarchal family. We aim to demonstrate that the characters’ minds are shaped in conformity with the theory of racial essentialism and nativism which suggeststhe existence of a myth of an identifiable and homogeneous natural character. Such an approach sets a white-black binary of race relations an...
This article aims to analyse the relationship between the depiction of place and the construction of...
This thesis examines various aspects of female subjectivity in the characters of Jean Rhys’s five no...
The purpose of this essay is to look into how Jean Rhys describes the complexity of colonialism in t...
Jean Rhys was interested in portraying the unexplored in the character of a Creole woman. Her novels...
In the context of post-colonial literatures in English, the novel "Wide Sargasso Sea" (1966) by the ...
As the daughter of an English father, Jean Rhys inherited from her father and his sister the asserti...
Jean Rhys ’ Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) is a postcolonial novel that gives a voice to Antoinette, the C...
Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) is a postcolonial novel that gives a voice to Antoinette, the Cr...
9 pagesJean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) is a postcolonial novel that gives a voice to Antoinette,...
Some works of art are a kind of term analysing products. By reading or examining them we can have an...
Wide Sargasso Sea is acclaimed as the masterpiece of the British female writer Jean Rhys. In the nov...
Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) is a postcolonial novel that gives a voice to Antoinette, the Cr...
This paper aims to provide an ecocritical analysis of Jean Rhys’ postcolonial novel Wide Sargasso Se...
This article aims to analyse the relationship between the depiction of place and the construction of...
As the daughter of an English father, Jean Rhys inherited from her father and his sister the asserti...
This article aims to analyse the relationship between the depiction of place and the construction of...
This thesis examines various aspects of female subjectivity in the characters of Jean Rhys’s five no...
The purpose of this essay is to look into how Jean Rhys describes the complexity of colonialism in t...
Jean Rhys was interested in portraying the unexplored in the character of a Creole woman. Her novels...
In the context of post-colonial literatures in English, the novel "Wide Sargasso Sea" (1966) by the ...
As the daughter of an English father, Jean Rhys inherited from her father and his sister the asserti...
Jean Rhys ’ Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) is a postcolonial novel that gives a voice to Antoinette, the C...
Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) is a postcolonial novel that gives a voice to Antoinette, the Cr...
9 pagesJean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) is a postcolonial novel that gives a voice to Antoinette,...
Some works of art are a kind of term analysing products. By reading or examining them we can have an...
Wide Sargasso Sea is acclaimed as the masterpiece of the British female writer Jean Rhys. In the nov...
Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea (1966) is a postcolonial novel that gives a voice to Antoinette, the Cr...
This paper aims to provide an ecocritical analysis of Jean Rhys’ postcolonial novel Wide Sargasso Se...
This article aims to analyse the relationship between the depiction of place and the construction of...
As the daughter of an English father, Jean Rhys inherited from her father and his sister the asserti...
This article aims to analyse the relationship between the depiction of place and the construction of...
This thesis examines various aspects of female subjectivity in the characters of Jean Rhys’s five no...
The purpose of this essay is to look into how Jean Rhys describes the complexity of colonialism in t...