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- Keyword
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- A.A. Milne;Hundred Acre Wood;Winnie-the-Pooh;House at Pooh Corner;Christopher Robin (Fictitious character);Arcadian fantasy;Victorian Period;Edwardian Period;English literature;Victorian childhood;Victorian child-rearing ideology;British boarding schools;children's literature;traumatic childhoods;Christopher Milne (1)
- Culture (1)
- Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak; French feminism; postcolonial politics; postcolonial feminism; France; (1)
- History (1)
- Psychology (1)
- Publication
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Social Psychology
Idealization And Desire In The Hundred Acre Wood: A.A. Milne And Christopher (Robin), Laura E. Bright
Idealization And Desire In The Hundred Acre Wood: A.A. Milne And Christopher (Robin), Laura E. Bright
Honors Projects
Argues that A.A. Milne's Winnie-the-Pooh and The House at Pooh Corner represent the conscious rejection, unconscious reproduction, and re-imaging of the author's traumatic Victorian childhood.
Trading French And Postcolonial Feminisms, Zubeda Jalalzai
Trading French And Postcolonial Feminisms, Zubeda Jalalzai
Faculty Publications
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, in articulating feminist and postcolonial politics, raises issues of importance for both first world and third world feminists as well as enacting some of the very dangers which accompany those tenuous relationships. Spivak's essays, "French Feminism in an International Frame" (1981) and "French Feminism Revisited: Ethics and Politics" (1992), provide a rich arena in which she presents powerful cautions regarding international solidarities and explores the complicated dynamics of ethical relationships on multiple levels, including that between mother and daughter, bourgeois postcolonial feminist and the woman of the "ground," as well as between metropolitan and postcolonial feminists.