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Demon Out of Freezer and the Havoc Around it: A Bioethical Analysis of Carole Stivers’ The Mother Code
The present paper “Demon Out of Freezer and the Havoc Around it: A Bioethical Analysis of Carole Stivers’ The Mother Code” attempts to bring out the need for bioethics in the technologically modified world. The novel gives a detailed analysis of the problems created due to lack of bioethical values...
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Black But Not American: The Racial Awakening and Alienation of Ifemelu in Adichie’s Americanah
Seeing something with different eyes is not the same. Every individual has their own way of pointing and gazing. The happy mode of space makes the place happier than ever, if the view of space is seen in the mode of sadness, then the attire will change to be sad,...
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Tracing the Cultural Shift from Colonial Legacy to Creolized Identity in Michelle Mendonca Bambawale’s Becoming Goan: A Contemporary Coming-Home Story
The present paper is an attempt to analyse the cultural transformations in Goan society through the lens of creolization. The memoir explores various dimensions of creolization, highlighting its impact on Goan culture and identity. Creolization is a major aspect of colonial and postcolonial literature as it refers to the process...
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Unveiling Tribal Ecological Knowledge in Nidhi Dugar Kundalia’s White as Milk and Rice
Abstract Tribal ecological knowledge (TEK) is a cumulative body of traditional knowledge transmitted through generations, offering insights into the intricate relationships between Indigenous communities and their environment. Acknowledging previously undocumented aspects of indigenous knowledge facilitates the restoration and maintenance of environmental equilibrium
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The Power of Storytelling as seen through Kristin Hannah’s Winter Garden
This study explores the multifaceted power of storytelling in Kristin Hannah, examining its function as a crucial mechanism for processing intergenerational trauma, shaping individual and familial identity and ultimately, and facilitating reconciliation. Moving beyond a simple narrative of family disfunction, this study explores into the complicated ways in which Anya’s...
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Nurturing Nature across Generations: An Exploration of Tim Winton’s Blueback
Intergenerational environmentalism refers to the principle of environmental responsibility that is transmitted from one generation to another. This notion advocates a shared obligation to preserve environment. Intergenerational environmentalism is a part of the broader movement for environmental justice, and it stresses the need for a healthy environment for future generations.
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Cycles of Suffering: Exploring Pain and Resilience in Aravind Adiga’s Between the Assassinations – “Day One (Morning): The Railway Station”
Aravind Adiga’s Between the Assassinations discusses the struggles faced by the people who are marginalized by caste, religion, socio-political norms and cultural conflict in postcolonial India. This paper analyses the sufferings caused by caste and religious ideologies and experienced by marginalized children in a fictitious city named Kittur.
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Roots of Resistance: A Symbolic Exploration of Caste, Nature, and Modernity in The Tamarind Tree
Sundara Ramasamy’s The Tamarind Tree delves deeply into themes of ecological change, caste oppression, and the socio-political effects of industrialization. This essay explores the ways in which a few symbols—including the tamarind, casuarina, and banyan trees, as well as the tamarind tank, temple, school and marketplace—reflect environmental deterioration, social hierarchies,...
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Race and Socio-economic condition in Suzan Lori Parks’ Father comes Home from the Wars Parts 1, 2 and 3
Race and Socio-economic condition in Suzan Lori Parks’ Father comes Home from the Wars Parts 1, 2 and 3 Dr. J. ChitraAssistant Professor of English, Pioneer Kumaraswamy College, Nagercoil.Email: chitraarul1982@gmail.com AbstractThis paper critically explores various challenges faced by the suppressed slaves in western societies. The paper highlights the way in...
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Forms of Political Resistance: Analyzing Literature and Art
Resistance is an inherent quality in mankind, a quality shared by most civilizations. Human beings have perpetually resisted throughout history, especially when they were subjected to all forms of hegemony. Resistance is predominantly the thought of not giving into the unjust, impartial and immoral.
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