ABSTRACT The Survival of the Feminine Figure Through the Reconciliation of Nature and Logos (August 2017) Daniela Núñez Ochoa, B.A. English; B.A. Spanish, Texas A&M International University; Chair of Committee: Dr. Manuel Broncano This work focuses on analyzing and questioning the role two feminine protagonists play in a phallogocentric social system depicted within two novels. The research will explore the narrative and outcome experienced by Doña Bárbara and Janie Crawford, from Rómulo Gallegos’ Doña Bárbara and Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, in a post-colonial twentieth-century American continent. Hélène Cixous’ concept of feminine writing, which roots from her essay “The Laugh of the Medusa” an...
The traditional literary epic, an androcentric genre produced within patriarchial cultures by male a...
Art serves as a historical archive of the collective imagination, which forms and reinforces a model...
This project examines four specific feminine figures in narrative works by Central American women wr...
This work focuses on analyzing and questioning the role two feminine protagonists play in a phallogo...
This thesis examines how and why the representation of the femme fatale is constructed and recycled...
This thesis examines how and why the representation of the femme fatale is constructed and recycled...
Feminist philosopher Hélène Cixous uses Medusa as a metaphor for the powerful female voice that can ...
Using the feminist theory of Julia Kristeva and Luce Irigaray, this thesis explores the journey of f...
This research demonstrates how Isabel Allende has created a trilogy representing alterity and the su...
Patriarchal and sexist discourses have come under scorching attacks from most feminist writers since...
Cuerpos en disputa, mujer e imaginarios de nación en Hispanoamérica: Juan Francisco Manzano, Eva Per...
Abstract: Whether spoken or written, non fictional or imaginary entity, literature is an account of ...
This project examines four specific feminine figures in narrative works by Central American women wr...
Motivated by the lack of scholarship surrounding female characters in Gabriel Garcia Marquez\u27s On...
The Dramatic Feminine Discourse of Cristina Escofet interrogates this author's use of language as a ...
The traditional literary epic, an androcentric genre produced within patriarchial cultures by male a...
Art serves as a historical archive of the collective imagination, which forms and reinforces a model...
This project examines four specific feminine figures in narrative works by Central American women wr...
This work focuses on analyzing and questioning the role two feminine protagonists play in a phallogo...
This thesis examines how and why the representation of the femme fatale is constructed and recycled...
This thesis examines how and why the representation of the femme fatale is constructed and recycled...
Feminist philosopher Hélène Cixous uses Medusa as a metaphor for the powerful female voice that can ...
Using the feminist theory of Julia Kristeva and Luce Irigaray, this thesis explores the journey of f...
This research demonstrates how Isabel Allende has created a trilogy representing alterity and the su...
Patriarchal and sexist discourses have come under scorching attacks from most feminist writers since...
Cuerpos en disputa, mujer e imaginarios de nación en Hispanoamérica: Juan Francisco Manzano, Eva Per...
Abstract: Whether spoken or written, non fictional or imaginary entity, literature is an account of ...
This project examines four specific feminine figures in narrative works by Central American women wr...
Motivated by the lack of scholarship surrounding female characters in Gabriel Garcia Marquez\u27s On...
The Dramatic Feminine Discourse of Cristina Escofet interrogates this author's use of language as a ...
The traditional literary epic, an androcentric genre produced within patriarchial cultures by male a...
Art serves as a historical archive of the collective imagination, which forms and reinforces a model...
This project examines four specific feminine figures in narrative works by Central American women wr...