Colby Quarterly, Volume 34Colby College, 1998 |
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Page 50
... connection to a larger world through writing or the written word . That her characters ' lives are in some ways ... connected to other American women regionalists in the late nineteenth century , especially as her fiction reveals a ...
... connection to a larger world through writing or the written word . That her characters ' lives are in some ways ... connected to other American women regionalists in the late nineteenth century , especially as her fiction reveals a ...
Page 135
... connections between the sympathetic readers , the author , and the work , exemplified by the narrator and Mrs. Todd ... connection between the " author ( bearer of the word ) and the person who understands " ( Bakhtin , " Methodology ...
... connections between the sympathetic readers , the author , and the work , exemplified by the narrator and Mrs. Todd ... connection between the " author ( bearer of the word ) and the person who understands " ( Bakhtin , " Methodology ...
Page 147
... connection to the original events . In this way , Jewett suggests that women pass on their stories to those with ... connections between women - she inscribes in her stories about storytelling which require the reader's complicity ...
... connection to the original events . In this way , Jewett suggests that women pass on their stories to those with ... connections between women - she inscribes in her stories about storytelling which require the reader's complicity ...
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allusion androgyny Anna Prince Annie Annie Adams Fields Ash Wednesday beauty black women Blake Blake's Boston Bruce Cary characters Colby Colby College collage context conventional Country Doctor covers Critical cultural daughter Deephaven divine goal domestic Eliot Elly England Essays experience father female feminine feminist figure Folly Island Freeman's gender George Gerry Gerry girl grandmother Harper Horatia imagination Jack Prince King of Folly Lady Ferry Leslie literary literature lives lover male marriage marry Martha Mary maternal Miss Sydney mother Nan's narrative narrator nineteenth-century novel Old Friends patriarchal poem poetry Pointed Firs protagonist Quarterly reader realism relationship role romance Sarah Orne Jewett Science sense silence story suggests Sylvia T.S. Eliot tells things tion tradition turn unwritable vision voice White Heron white women Whitman Wilkins Wilkins Freeman William Blake William Dean Howells Wollstonecraft's woman Womanhood women writers words York young