Showing Results for
- Literature Criticism (8)
Search Results
- 8
Literature Criticism
- 8
-
From:Atenea (Vol. 35, Issue 1-2)As the facts that lead to the murder of Santiago Nasar unfold in Chronicle of a Death Foretold, the narrator of the story explores the social order of an unnamed town in South America, indicating that the relationship...
-
From:Atenea (Vol. 35, Issue 1-2)Every species is equipped with the genes best suited to enable its members to mate, fight, flee, and find food, but as a particular species evolves some of its genes become less important than others--some degenerate and...
-
From:Atenea (Vol. 35, Issue 1-2)The adjective in the title of this essay comes from a colloquial term for the age-old trope of depicting "Vikings" in horned helmets, as well as a number of other broad, stereotypical quirks common in representations of...
-
From:Atenea (Vol. 35, Issue 1-2)De los consejos segundos que dio don Quijote a Sancho Panza: >>No comas ajos ni cebollas, porque no saquen por el olor tu villaneria. >>Anda despacio; habla con reposo, pero no de manera que parezca que te escuchas a...
-
From:Atenea (Vol. 35, Issue 1-2)Our concept of development implies a rejection of the frequently held view that cognitive development results from the gradual accumulation of separate changes. We believe that child development is a complex dialectical...
-
From:Atenea (Vol. 35, Issue 1-2)On a moonlit night at an unspecified time and place in an imagined version of the Middle Ages, the lady Christabel comes upon a woman named Geraldine in the wood, who tells a harrowing tale of her abduction. In Samuel...
-
From:Atenea (Vol. 35, Issue 1-2)Janie Crawford, the central character in Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God, is a woman "search[ing] for her authentic self " (Danticat ix). As presented in the novel, Janie is consistently described in...
-
From:Atenea (Vol. 35, Issue 1-2)From the very first page of Percival Everett's novel Erasure, the protagonist Thelonious Monk refuses to describe himself within the boundaries of the stereotypical images of race. Although neither the author nor the...