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dc.contributor.authorPierini, Francesca
dc.contributor.authorPierini, Francesca
dc.date.accessioned2025-07-20T07:44:29Z
dc.date.available2025-07-20T07:44:29Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.identifier.urirepository.auw.edu.bd:8080//handle/123456789/590
dc.description.abstractThis article discusses E.M. Forster’s “Italian narratives”, a literary corpus that reveals the complexity, the ambivalence, and the richness of Britain’s relation to the European South. Forster’s narratives present, through the interplay of their characters, a vast array of approaches and attitudes towards Italian culture. By making use of a long cultural and literary tradition that depicts Italy as the bearer of a unique constellation of counter-values perceived at the opposite spectrum of British ideals, Forster builds a series of narratives dominated by a game of revulsion and attraction towards the Italian Other, which is characterized by powerful and contradicting patterns.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherAUWen_US
dc.subjectE.M. Forster, Italian Narratives, postcolonial theory, Roberto M. Dainotto, climatology, the civilizing mission, the noble savage, the Hegelian appropriation of the other.en_US
dc.title“Such is the Working of the Southern Mind” A Postcolonial Reading of E.M. Forster’sItalian Narrativesen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US


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