Showing 21 - 34 results of 34 for search '"Eudora Welty"', query time: 0.22s Refine Results
  1. 21

    ‘Many dark ribbons’ ou le format mis en fiction : The Golden Apples de Eudora Welty by Jean-Marc Victor

    “…This article proposes to analyze the complex ways in which Eudora Welty plays with such a format in her own 1949 short story cycle The Golden Apples. …”
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    From “Big Red” Hydrick to Goat Dykeman: Eudora Welty’s Navigation between the Fictional and the Real in “Where Is the Voice Coming From?” by Ha Quan-Manh, Hitchcock Ryan

    Published 2018-07-01
    “…Known for her lyrical evocations of the American South, Eudora Welty’s short story “Where is the Voice Coming From?” …”
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  5. 25

    The Unreliable Narrator as a Precedent to the Post-Truth Era: Subjective Personal Memory in the Literary Autobiographies of Eudora Welty and Tom Robbins by Dorotka Bachratá

    Published 2019-10-01
    “…How does this phenomenon project itself in such a particular place between fact and fiction, occupied solely by literary autobiographies? Eudora Welty and Tom Robbins, two prominent 20th century literary personas, provide a detailed account of their journey towards self-realization in two connected, yet very different ways. …”
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    The heinle original film series in literature on DVD [videorecording]

    Published 2003
    “…Raymond carver's "Cathedral" -- John Updike's "A & P" -- Eudora Welty's "A worn path"…”
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    Race, Rights, and Resistance in Southern Literature in the Age of Obama by Pearl Amelia McHaney

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…“Where Is the Voice Coming From?” (Eudora Welty), “Nineteen Fifty-Five” (Alice Walker), “Everything that Rises Must Converge” (Flannery O’Connor), and “Negro Progress” (Tony Grooms) are fictional evocations of realistic places, people, and events in Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, that are especially appropriate in the Age of Obama for discussion of the roles of the public artist and the private human regarding race, rights, and resistance.…”
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  9. 29

    Mourning Medgar: Justice, Aesthetics, and the Local by Minrose Gwin

    Published 2008-03-01
    “…She examines the 1963 assassination of Medgar Evers in Jackson, Mississippi, through writings by James Baldwin, Anne Moody, Eudora Welty, and Margaret Walker.…”
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  10. 30

    The Ways of Conveying Low Colloquialisms in its Translation from English into Russian by N.V. Kazanskaya

    Published 2022-01-01
    “… The article covers the problems of commentary in translation of fiction, related to the difficulties of conveying low colloquialisms and ways to solve them and achieve the most adequate translation (meaning extension, loss-of-meaning compensation, descriptive equivalence in translation, concretization, generalization) with examples of the author's translation from the story by Eudora Welty “A worn path”. The paper includes the most interesting moments for translation associated with the speech image of the main character.…”
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  11. 31

    THE TRUTH FROM FACT TO FICTION IN TWO SHORT STORIES OF THE TWENTIETH-CENTURY OLD SOUTH by Anca PEIU

    Published 2019-03-01
    “…The short-stories I have chosen to discuss here are “A Worn Path” (1941) by Eudora Welty and “The Artificial Nigger” (1955) by Flannery O’Connor. …”
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  12. 32

    Ross Macdonald, Redivivus? by Robert Lance Snyder

    “…After a definitive biography appeared in 1999, the Library of America, a sure benchmark of literary recognition, released in 2015 the first of three volumes devoted to his fiction; the same year saw the publication of his letters to and from Eudora Welty; and in 2016 Fantagraphics Books issued Macdonald’s marathon interviews with Paul Nelson. …”
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    Publication and Recognition: Kay Boyle and the O. Henry Award by Christine HAIT

    Published 2013-06-01
    “…In addition, Boyle and Eudora Welty often published stories that competed in the same years for the judges’ attention. …”
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