Journal Article10.2307/1185743
New world encounters
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TL;DR: Greenblatt and Zamora as mentioned in this paper presented a collection of essays about the role of women in the development of women's rights, including a discussion of race relations and women's reproductive rights.
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Abstract: CONTRIBUTORS: Stephen Greenblatt Margarita Zamora Inga Clendinnen Rolena Adorno Anthony Pagden Sabine MacCormack Frank Lestringant David Damrosch Sara Castro-Klaren Louis Montrose Mary C. Fuller David Quint Jeffrey Knapp Luce Giard Michel de Certeau
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Citations
Angling in the Lake of Darkness: Possession, Dispossession, and the Politics of Discovery in King Lear
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•Dissertation
Way back to Aztlan: Sixteenth century Hispanic-Nahuatl transculturation and the construction of the new Mexico.
Danna Alexandra Levin-Rojo
- 01 Jan 2002
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“I Laid my Hands on a Gorgeous Cannibal Woman”: Anthropophagy in the Imperial Imagination, 1492 – 1763
Kelly Lea Watson
- 01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: Schocket et al. as mentioned in this paper examined European writings about cannibalism in North America from 1492 until 1763, uncovering insights into the establishment and maintenance of imperial power and revealing new insights into historical documents and to recenter gender in the study of the discourse of cannibalism.
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Villains, Victims, or Makonde in the Making?: Reading the Explorer Henry O'Neill and Listening to the Headman Lishehe
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that those O'Neill met on the plateau as more complex historical subjects who brought to the encounter their own fears, aspirations, and strategic agendas.
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Speaking to Silent Ladies: Images of Beauty and Politics in Poetic Portraits of Women from Petrarch to Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz
TL;DR: In sonnets 77 and 78 of the Rime sparse (1372), Francesco Petrarca writes to the painted portrait of his beloved Laura, painted by his friend Simone Martini, whom the poet came to know in Avignon.
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