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- Sri Lanka;nationalism in literature;culture in literature;English literature;English fiction;nationalism in music;expatriates;Michael Ondaatje;Running in the family;Anil's ghost;Cinnamon peeler;Shyam Selvadurai;Funny boy;M.I.A. (Musician);literary criticism;subalterns;expatriate musicians;expatriate writers;gays in literature (1)
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- Virginia;literary criticism;English literature;women authors;manliness;masculinity in literature;men in literature;patriarchy;gender expectations;gender equality;British cultural expectations;male characters;Septimus Smith (fictional character);Mr. Ramsay (fictional character);The Waves;To the Lighthouse;Mrs. Dalloway;Percival (fictional character);social inequality;Post-World War I British society (1)
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Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in English Language and Literature
Imagining Sri Lanka, Derick Kirishan Ariyam
Imagining Sri Lanka, Derick Kirishan Ariyam
Master's Theses, Dissertations, Graduate Research and Major Papers Overview
Analyzes the works of three Sri Lankan expatriates, the writers, Shyam Selvadurai and Michael Ondaatje, and the artist, M.I.A., giving particular attention to Selvadurai's Funny Boy and Ondaatje's Running in the Family, Anil's Ghost, and The Cinnamon Peeler. Though all three have been charged as "inauthentic" due to their dislocated positions, uncovers the various productive and complicated ways Sri Lanka has been configured by those outside its shores.
Dismantling The Cult Of Manliness, Peter Capalbo
Dismantling The Cult Of Manliness, Peter Capalbo
Master's Theses, Dissertations, Graduate Research and Major Papers Overview
Explores the argument that several of Virginia Woolf's male characters, including Septimus Smith, Mr. Ramsay, and Bernard (in The Waves), challenge traditional male gender expectations in Britain after World War I. Examines Woolf's use of the concept of manliness in structuring her novels and her presentation of a series of men who do not conform to the British ideal of masculinity and who, thereby, allow her to expose the multiple fallacies of that ideal and a culture supported by such a concept. Posits that Woolf's work suggests that a new, more inclusive, understanding of gender is an important first step …