Discourse: Berkeley Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture, Bindi 19,Útgáfa 21997 |
From inside the book
Niðurstöður 1 - 3 af 21
Síða 66
... violence to “ realizing ” that women's receptivity signifies castration does not eliminate associations of violence from the sexual scene , but it does ground them in natural law . This means not that heterosexual sex is tantamount to ...
... violence to “ realizing ” that women's receptivity signifies castration does not eliminate associations of violence from the sexual scene , but it does ground them in natural law . This means not that heterosexual sex is tantamount to ...
Síða 129
... violence : the Malians ' debt to violence as well as their urge to reproduce it in other forms . The narrator concludes : " One cannot help recalling that Saif , mourned three million times , is forever reborn to history beneath the hot ...
... violence : the Malians ' debt to violence as well as their urge to reproduce it in other forms . The narrator concludes : " One cannot help recalling that Saif , mourned three million times , is forever reborn to history beneath the hot ...
Síða 188
... violence of memory , which is itself the violence of writing desire , is also a condition of possibility for postcolo- nial knowledge . This violence releases the power of ghosts , whose haunting informs our knowledge . I have also ...
... violence of memory , which is itself the violence of writing desire , is also a condition of possibility for postcolo- nial knowledge . This violence releases the power of ghosts , whose haunting informs our knowledge . I have also ...
Efni
What Does a Jew Want? or The Political Meaning of the Phallus | 21 |
The Oedipus Complex and Douglasss | 53 |
Seraph on | 72 |
Höfundarréttur | |
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African American analysis anti-Semitism appear argued argument Arvay authority become begins body called castration characters civilized claims clarify colonial color complex consciousness consider criticism critique cultural desire difference discourse discussion domination double Douglass effects emphasis essay European example explain fact Fanon fantasy father figure film French Freud gender Gide Gide's Gilman gives human Hurston identification identity instance interpretation Jewish Jews jokes knowledge Lacan language live male meaning Michigan mind misogyny mother narrative natural Negro object observation past personality political position postcolonial present produces psychic psychoanalysis question race racial racism reading relation remarks represent Robeson Routledge scene seems sense sexual simply slave social speak specific structure Studies suggest symbolic term theory thought tion Trans Travels uncanny unconscious understanding University Varuna violence woman women writes York