Results 291 to 300 of about 9,985,382 (324)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

MARGINALITY AND IDENTITY IN ALI SMITH’S SPRING

INTERSTUDIA
This paper addresses the research question: How are marginalisation and identity constructed in All Smith's Spring, and what role does the past Brexit political context play in this construction?
Georgiana VĂSÂI (RUFF)
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Katherine Mansfield and Ali Smith

Women: A Cultural Review, 2009
Katherine Mansfield, The Collected Stories, Ali Smith, Introduction, Penguin Classics, 2007, £14.99 paperback 978 0 14 144181 8.
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BrexLit through Gender Lens: A Study of Ali Smith s Autumn and Jonathan Coe’s Middle England

Literary Oracle
Brexit, Britain’s exit from the European Union, has been approached critically from political, economic, social, and cultural points of view, but gender issues in the Brexit discourses are less explored.
Mousumi Chowdhury
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Beyond trans* medicalisation: hapticality and the art of crafting trans*masculine identities in Ali Smith’s How to be both (2014)

Journal of Lesbian Studies
The past decade has witnessed an unprecedented rise in trans* representation in literature, with works of fictions that go from critically acclaimed best sellers like Torrey Peters’ Detransition Baby (2021) to Booker-Prize winner postcolonial-centred ...
Lisselot El Martin-Plaza
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“Politics of racism” and BrexLit: Questioning the racially labelled entities in Ali Smith’s Autumn

Journal of Postcolonial Writing
Racism sits at the centre of the UK’s debates about Brexit and BrexLit. Contemporary commentators have tended to reduce to racial issues the intricate economic and political aspirations of Brexit supporters in 2016.
Xiaohui Liang
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Generous dissonance and wanderings: form and politics in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway and Ali Smith’s Hotel World

Journal of Lesbian Studies
This essay looks at, and compares, Hotel World by Ali Smith and Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf and attempts to understand the differences within both the formal and philosophical/political outlook of the two works.
Turner Nat Byrd
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“Then you tell me you’ve fallen in love with a tree”: Queer ecologies in Ali Smith’s short stories

Journal of Lesbian Studies
The present article takes the recurrent motif of trees in Ali Smith’s oeuvre as a point of departure to analyze how Smith forges an alliance between environmental concerns and queerness. It argues that her short stories present their own version of queer
Laura Schmitz-Justen
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Thinking Backwards/Looking Forwards: Ali Smith’s Virginia Woolf, Metamodernism’s Paranoia

Modernist Cultures
This article argues that in order better to understand what David James and Urmila Seshagiri term ‘metamodernism’, we must first be attentive to the contemporaneity of another well-known strand of present-day literary discourse: postcritique.
Iona Bennett
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The 'Internal Tree:' Arboreal Symbols in Ali Smith's Autumn

Forum for Contemporary Issues in Language and Literature
Following the publishing of Autumn (2016), Scottish author Ali Smith has received both international acclaim as well as negative reviews for it supposedly being a collage of seemingly unrelated subjects.
Aylín Esmeralda García Hernández
semanticscholar   +1 more source

COMMONISM AND IDEOLOGY IN ALI SMITH’S “COMMON”

2022
This paper deals with alternative modes of human existence as presented in Ali Smith’s short story “Common” (2009). Commonism, according to Nico Dockx and Pascal Gielen is a new radical ideology that is based on the values of sharing, common intellectual ownership and new social co-operations.
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