Weaving Tales

Weaving Tales

Anglo-Iberian Encounters on Literatures in English

Garcia-Ramirez, Paula; Varandas, Angelica; Whittaker, Jason; Valverde, Beatriz

Taylor & Francis Ltd

04/2025

238

Mole

Inglês

9781032447728

Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição

Descrição não disponível.
Acknowledgments; List of Contributors; Introduction: Weaving Tales



Urizen Now: Reading Anew William Blake's Response to His Times, Alcinda Pinheiro de Sousa and Jason Whitaker
William Blake in Spanish Popular Culture and Literature, M. Cecilia Marchetto Santorun
(Re)reading Classical Mythology through the Aztec Gods: Cherrie Moraga's Lesbian Mexican Medea, Marta Villalba-Lazaro
From Influence to Response: Angela Carter's Selected Novels Come to Terms with William Shakespeare's Tragedies, Maria Jose Pires
PD James's The Black Tower: "almost Iris Murdoch with murders in it"?, Jesus Nieto
Romanticism and heteronymic theory: John Keats and the Poetics of Fernando Pessoa, Nuno Ribeiro
Jennifer Egan and Digital Fiction after Postmodernism, Mairi Power
"Non Angli, sed angeli": The Christianization of the Anglo-Saxons and the dawn of Englishness, Angelica Varandas
Exploring the "Outsider Consciousness" in a Selection of Stories by Alice Munro, Pilar Sanchez Calle
Depiction of Enforced Identity in Hazaar Chaurasi Ki Maa - The Novel and the Film, Ritu Mohan
A Transmodern Reading of Joanna Kavenna's Zed: Digital Reason and the Attempt to Transcend Cartesian Dialectics, Jessica Aliaga Lavrijsen
Hospitable Loci: the Spatialisation of Oppositional Worldviews in the Eighteenth- Century Women's Writings, Yolanda Caballero Aceituno
"REMEMBEREST THOU ME?" Violent Women in Louisa Medina Hamblin's The Panorama of Life, Milagros Lopez-Pelaez Casellas
Patriarchal Orthorexia and Embodied Dissidence in Contemporary Feminist Dystopias, Almudena Machado-Jimenez
Instapoetry and the Transmodern Paradigm: Transnational Feminism in Nikita Gill's Work, Alejandro Nadal Ruiz
Index
Assunto não disponível.
Iberian;Identities;Portugese Literature;Anglo-Iberian;Postmodern