Discourse: Berkeley Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture, Bindi 16,Útgáfa 1Indiana University Press, 1993 |
From inside the book
Niðurstöður 1 - 3 af 26
Síða 45
... call for the teaching of the canon , a move that I imagine actually has very little resonance for the nonacademic for whom the rest of the book may be appealing . The point is that for many viewers of the debate within popular culture ...
... call for the teaching of the canon , a move that I imagine actually has very little resonance for the nonacademic for whom the rest of the book may be appealing . The point is that for many viewers of the debate within popular culture ...
Síða 120
... calls for but does not herself employ : meta- phors , allegories , fictional stories ( which often read like folk tales ) , etc. The voice that emerges is thus a profoundly personal one , designed not only to respond to the calls of ...
... calls for but does not herself employ : meta- phors , allegories , fictional stories ( which often read like folk tales ) , etc. The voice that emerges is thus a profoundly personal one , designed not only to respond to the calls of ...
Síða 153
... call its own . Since Jerene never mentions the parents of the twins , one can only assume that the twins produced ... calls her mother , the latter refuses even to recognize her daughter's name : " I don't know any Jerene . You must ...
... call its own . Since Jerene never mentions the parents of the twins , one can only assume that the twins produced ... calls her mother , the latter refuses even to recognize her daughter's name : " I don't know any Jerene . You must ...
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academic American analysis appear argues Barthes Barthes's beauty become begin Blue body calls castration cinema critical culture death desire difference discourse discussion Dracula effect essay example experience face fantasy fashion Father Figure fear female feminine feminism feminist film final Gauss gender George gives homophobic homosexuality human intellectual issue kind knowledge language less look lyric male Marilyn meaning Megan Michael Miller misogyny Monroe mother move myth narrative never novel object once original perhaps Photograph play political popular position postmodern present professor puts question reading relation representation role says scene seems sexual shows social song speak specific story studies suggests taxi Teleny tells theory tion tradition truth turn University vampire Virginia Woolf voice woman women writes York