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Articles 1 - 13 of 13

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Why Are Those Women So Angry? (Alienating People Of Good Will), Janet Bing Jan 2000

Why Are Those Women So Angry? (Alienating People Of Good Will), Janet Bing

English Faculty Publications

(First paragraph) Until quite recently, I dismissed criticisms of "angry feminists" as a sexist stereotype. I was tired of hearing people say, "I believe in equal pay for equal work, but I dislike those bra-burning feminists!" Perhaps I'm too young, but almost all of my friends are feminists, and I have yet to meet anyone who has burned her bra, so this comment always strikes me as bizarre. However, recently I have begun to think seriously about the power of stereotypes and the ability of people to disregard messages they do not want to hear. I now realize that feminists …


Smoke, Rénee Olander Jan 2000

Smoke, Rénee Olander

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


What Does That Mean?, Carolyn Rhodes Jan 2000

What Does That Mean?, Carolyn Rhodes

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Decision, Edith White Jan 2000

Decision, Edith White

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Comparative Literature In The United States, Manuela MourãO Jan 2000

Comparative Literature In The United States, Manuela MourãO

English Faculty Publications

In her article, "Comparative Literature in the United States," Manuela Mourão offers a historical overview of the debates about comparative literature as a discipline, from the early years of its institutionalization in the United States until the present. Mourão summarizes the most pointed -- and anxious -- interventions of prominent scholars in the field and she discusses the permanent sense of crisis that has typically been part of the discipline. Further, Mourão links the permanent anxiety of the discipline with the prescriptive tendencies that have continued to endure until the present. She then looks at the debates that followed the …


Grandma, Matilda Cox Jan 2000

Grandma, Matilda Cox

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Songs Of A Turning Body, Luisa A. Igloria Jan 2000

Songs Of A Turning Body, Luisa A. Igloria

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Cover Girl Run For Cover, Rénee Olander Jan 2000

Cover Girl Run For Cover, Rénee Olander

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Why Are Those Women So Angry?, Janet Bing Jan 2000

Why Are Those Women So Angry?, Janet Bing

English Faculty Publications

(First paragraph) Until quite recently, I dismissed criticisms of "angry femini sts" as a sexist stereotype. I was tired of hearing people say, "I believe in equal pay for equal work, but I dislike those bra-burning feminists!" Perhaps I'm too young, but almost all of my friends are feminists, and I have yet to meet anyone who has burned her bra, so this comment always strikes me as bizarre. However, recently I have begun to think seriously about the power of stereotypes and the ability of people to disregard messages they do not want to hear. I now realize that …


Two Birds On A Postcard, Farideh Dayanim Goldin Jan 2000

Two Birds On A Postcard, Farideh Dayanim Goldin

English Faculty Publications

(First paragraph)My sister, Nahid, is four years younger than me. She suffers from osteomyelitis, which began from an infected umbilicus at birth, the result of unsanitary conditions at Morsalin hospital in Iran. She was given massive doses of antibiotics to help fight the infection, followed by surgery at the age of one to drain the affected area. Despite these efforts, the top of Nahid 's right femur was eroded by the infection. It left her with a hanging hip and a severe limp.


Pai Dos Burros, Luisa A. Igloria Jan 2000

Pai Dos Burros, Luisa A. Igloria

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Excerpts From "Death Journal", Nancy Olthoff Jan 2000

Excerpts From "Death Journal", Nancy Olthoff

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


White Women, Black Revolutionaries: Sex And Politics In Four Novels By Nadine Gordimer, Nancy Topping Bazin Jan 2000

White Women, Black Revolutionaries: Sex And Politics In Four Novels By Nadine Gordimer, Nancy Topping Bazin

English Faculty Publications

As early as 1959, the white South African novelist, essayist, and short story writer Nadine Gordimer wrote an essay, "Where Do Whites Fit In?" As the black struggle for power intensified and finally achieved its primary goal of black majority rule in 1994, Gordimer continued to reflect upon this question. Her eighth novel, July's People (1981), is a psychological and political fable. It celebrates a white woman's readiness to reject the relationships and privileges that bind her to the white world and her readiness to embrace the new South Africa of an emancipated black majority. The novels written before July's …