When light looks at itself, what does it see? Maybe a fat man eating to fill a lonely heart. Maybe a bored office worker who finally ventures outside to find herself. Perhaps a grieving husband making a choice about where to go next, a girl returning home after surviving a suicide attempt, a homeless person meeting a compassionate stranger, a woman finding her way through love's affronts and contradictions to its moments of grace. What roads does the soul take and what landscapes does it pass through on its journey to freedom? How does the river of change and growth, death and rebirth, move...
When light looks at itself, what does it see? Maybe a fat man eating to fill a lonely heart. Maybe a bored office worker who finally ventures outside ...
Writing a Politics of Perception offers new approaches to five novels by women writing in Canada. Dawn Thompson analyses these works through an epistemological theory that shifts critical perspective in surprising ways.
Under consideration are two classics of Canadian literature, Nicole Brossard's "Picture Theory" and Margaret Atwood's "Surfacing," as well as three lesser-known works: Marlene Nourbese Phillip's "Looking for Livingstone," Beatrice Culleton's "In Search of April Raintree," and R?gine Robin's "La Qu?b?coite." Thompson develops a theory of 'holographic memory, '...
Writing a Politics of Perception offers new approaches to five novels by women writing in Canada. Dawn Thompson analyses these works throu...
He Restored Me As a child you hold on to specific dreams. Everything so joyful and easy to grasp. Suddenly life change. Storms of life occur. An individual being restored and became successful.
He Restored Me As a child you hold on to specific dreams. Everything so joyful and easy to grasp. Suddenly life change. Storms of life occur. An indi...