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Articles 1 - 26 of 26
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Une Révolution Boudjedrienne Des Concepts Historiques : Un Regard De L’Histoire (Fictionnelle) Sur L’Histoire, Laetitia Vincent
Une Révolution Boudjedrienne Des Concepts Historiques : Un Regard De L’Histoire (Fictionnelle) Sur L’Histoire, Laetitia Vincent
Présence Francophone: Revue internationale de langue et de littérature
Rachid Boudjedra binds ingeniously fictional and real history and, beyond historic forgery, this author succeeds in transcribing the authentic events of his country. This article exposes one of the novelist’s historic conceptions through which the reader apprehends History : detailed visions alternate and blend with globalizing visions. For this author, nothing must be abandoned or put aside; by analyzing his novelistic writing, a fictional mosaic, we will come to understand his perspective on History.
Dragonflies On The Stairs, Gary Pedler
Dragonflies On The Stairs, Gary Pedler
Bryant Literary Review
It was the only Victorian left on the block. On either side stood apartment buildings, one from the turn of the last century, the other from the nineteen eighties, both nondescript in different ways.
Fugitive Day, Ellen Prentiss Cambell
Fugitive Day, Ellen Prentiss Cambell
Bryant Literary Review
Yonder Hills it was called then, and still is now, after the first line from an old hymn my grandmother used to sing, "Yonder Hills are very Fair."
The Agreement, Lewis Schrager
The Agreement, Lewis Schrager
Bryant Literary Review
When the shooting starts, the tourists stay home. No tourists, no business--Mamoun Aboulafia knew the situation all too well.
Worms, Gary Guinn
Worms, Gary Guinn
Bryant Literary Review
At the wine and cheese party for the clinic staff, John described his worm farm to Doctor Miles.
The Rocking Cradle, Juned Subhan
The Rocking Cradle, Juned Subhan
Bryant Literary Review
It was bizarre when it happened to them, like a sign of something else to come, as if it was only the beginning, as if they should have foreseen it, but didn't, and were foolish not to.
The Lincoln-Douglas Debate Of 1984, Tom Williams
The Lincoln-Douglas Debate Of 1984, Tom Williams
Bryant Literary Review
I should have conceded as soon as Abraham Lincoln entered the room.
Country Junction, Tom Miller Juvik
Country Junction, Tom Miller Juvik
Bryant Literary Review
Talk to anyone in the county about the murder of Al DeLancy, the explanation will be the same.
Office Girl, Barry Jay Kaplan
Office Girl, Barry Jay Kaplan
Bryant Literary Review
I work in an office. I have my own desk which has a drawer right under the main surface where inside when I was hired and sat down at it for the first time I found paper clips and little pads of different colors and lots of pens and pencils…
Discussion Questions, Kevin Toth
Discussion Questions, Kevin Toth
Bryant Literary Review
Now that you've finished the novel, use the following questions to strengthen your understanding of the text or to spark discussion amongst your class or book club.
The Baby, Edan Lepucki
Little Corn Island, Leslie Jamison
Administrative Assistant, Matthew Ira Swaye
Red Cinquefoil, Daniel Mueller
The Bridge, Volume 4, 2007, Bridgewater State College
The Bridge, Volume 4, 2007, Bridgewater State College
the bridge
Volume 4 Staff
Laura Viola Maccarone, Editor-in-Chief
Shaylin Walsh, Editor-in-Chief
Cheryl Tullis, Webmaster
Maria Alonso
Michael Carter
Emily Goodwin
Ben Hogan
Michele Lyons
Shawna Macaulay
Corey Ritch
Charlie Robinson
Eric Smith
Emily Anne White
Derrick Zellmann
Mary Dondero, Faculty Advisor
Jerald Walker, Faculty Advisor
Linda Hall, Alumni Consultant
Rosann Kozlowski, Alumni Consultant
Some Kind Of Manifesto, Kriscinda L. Meadows
The Last Fairy Tale, Heather L. Stewart
Cold Feet, Alexandria M. Barkmeier
Twisted Jowls, Andrew P. Young
Brown Bag Lunch, Bethanne M. Mascio
Child Of Freedom, Caitlin A. Clarke
Margarita Night, Anna Chilton
Elizabeth Goudge Revisited: The Lost Art Of Happily Ever After, Anne A. Salter
Elizabeth Goudge Revisited: The Lost Art Of Happily Ever After, Anne A. Salter
Georgia Library Quarterly
The article focuses on the works of novelist Elizabeth Goudge. Her style of writing has been described as adult fairy tales. Her works were greatly influenced by the Victorian Period. Goudge's book "The White Witch" presents the historical backdrop of the English Civil War. Writer Josephine Lawrence stated in her review of the novelist's book "Gentian Hill" that the Victorian side of Goudge makes it appealing.
Illumination, Kelsey M. Lamagdeleine
The Sensational, Inspirational, Regrettable Life Of Ed, Alison F. Mccabe
The Sensational, Inspirational, Regrettable Life Of Ed, Alison F. Mccabe
The Mercury
No abstract provided.