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Bertha Mason ‘The Mad Woman in the Attic’: A - IJELS
Splet11. feb. 2013 · There is a moment in The Bell Jar when the Plath character, Esther Greenwood, is talking about her mother to her doctor and blurts out: “I hate her.” Her doctor says, “I suppose you do.” Her... SpletThe author used lexical repetitions to emphasize a significant image; sleep, my are … cs 2021 ルール
Bad, Mad or Sad? Legal Language, Narratives, and ... - SpringerLink
SpletWilliam Wordsworth, “The Mad Mother” (Lyrical Ballads, 1798) It is worth examining the … SpletBertha ‘came from a mad family, with a mother who was a madwoman and a drunkard’ … Spletthe sitpoint of the ‘mad mother of a disabled child’ (sitpoint is used here, in preference to standpoint, following Garland-Thomson’s (2002)’s deployment of the term to remind ... To shape our analysis, we begin by exploring the un/commonalities of the emerging histories of Critical Disability Studies, Mad Studies, and Matricentric cs 2021 チケット