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1 | The end(s) of myth : apocalyptic and prophetic fictions in Headhunter | 29 |
2 | Allegories of ruin and redemption : Michael Ondaatje's The English patient | 53 |
3 | Margaret Atwood's "hairball" : apocalyptic cannibal fiction | 83 |
4 | Mapping and dreaming : resisting apocalypse in Green grass, running water | 101 |
5 | Broken letters : Obasan as traumatic apocalyptic testimony | 128 |
Conclusion : adrift after the apocalypse | 161 |
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Add The Storm Blowing from Paradise: Apocalypse in Contemporary Canadian Fiction, Traditional apocalyptic narratives highlight the drama of a chosen elect. Contemporary Canadian fiction, however, typically portrays the apocalypse from the perspective of marginalized individuals barred from paradise, creating a distinctly anti-apocalypt, The Storm Blowing from Paradise: Apocalypse in Contemporary Canadian Fiction to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add The Storm Blowing from Paradise: Apocalypse in Contemporary Canadian Fiction, Traditional apocalyptic narratives highlight the drama of a chosen elect. Contemporary Canadian fiction, however, typically portrays the apocalypse from the perspective of marginalized individuals barred from paradise, creating a distinctly anti-apocalypt, The Storm Blowing from Paradise: Apocalypse in Contemporary Canadian Fiction to your collection on WonderClub |