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#Metoo in Wide Sargasso Sea

2020
This chapter uses the representation of sex acts in Wide Sargasso Sea to help think through the workings of agency, gender and race in contemporary responses to sexual violence in the United States. Even a sexual act that is not represented as rape in the novel nonetheless needs to be read in the context of the long history of rape since slavery and ...
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Wide Sargasso Sea’s Archipelagic Provincialism

Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism, 2019
This essay argues for an archipelagic rethinking of Jean Rhys’s novel Wide Sargasso Sea, which has long had an uneasy fit into the category of Caribbean literature. It does so by drawing from archipelagic studies and its distinction between islands as discrete, closed-off landmasses and archipelagoes as interconnected, terraqueous topographies. Through
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Teaching "Wide Sargasso Sea" in New Jersey

English Journal, 2005
Emphasizing experience and understanding, high school teacher Susan Arpajian Jolley uses the related novels Wide Sargasso Sea and Jane Eyre to help her students travel into unfamiliar cultural territory while gaining a fuller understanding of both texts and how they are relevant to the issues of today.
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Introduction to Wide Sargasso Sea at 50

2020
This introduction to the volume traces the reception of Wide Sargasso Sea from its publication in 1966 through the various theoretical paradigms used over the decades to articulate its current status as an influence upon other works of literature and the arts, literary criticism and theory. In considering the reasons for the novel’s ability to speak to
Elaine Savory, Erica L. Johnson
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Character Sketch Of Wide Sargasso Sea

American Journal of Science and Learning for Development
Wide Sargasso Sea is a novel by Dominican British author Jean Rhys. It is a story of Antoinette Cosway and her descent into madness at the hands of the cold-hearted and money-hungry Mr. Rochester. It was first published in 1966 and the novel is divided into three parts.
null Qurbonova N. R., null Khamdamova M.
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Wide Sargasso Sea: The Woman’s Text

1998
In Good Morning Midnight, Jean Rhys suggests that the feminine steers a precarious course between repetition, at best parodic, and silence. At first sight, Wide Sargasso Sea is still caught in the mesh of repetitive patterns, if only because it is a rewriting of Jane Eyre.
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Wide Sargasso Sea: The Transforming Vision

2005
Wide Sargasso Sea, over which Rhys labored for many years, demonstrates her complex management of sometimes competing demands. In responding to Charlotte Bronte’s 1847 novel Jane Eyre, Rhys found that she must make her way to a delicate balance of homage and critique as she revisited the work of her literary foremother and thereby traversed once again ...
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The Secret ofWide Sargasso Sea

Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 1990
(1990). The Secret of Wide Sargasso Sea. Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction: Vol. 31, No. 3, pp. 185-197.
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