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  1. Strange intimacy: affect, embodiment, materiality, and the non-human in Virginia Woolf and Jean Rhys.Eret Talviste - 2019 - Dissertation, University of Northumbria at Newcastle
    This thesis explores how the novels of Virginia Woolf and Jean Rhys – To the Lighthouse, Between the Acts, After Leaving Mr Mackenzie and Wide Sargasso Sea – despite being set in times of wars and social change that influence personal lives, maintain an attachment to and love for life. This thesis proposes that Woolf and Rhys ‘locate’ this attachment to life in the moments and atmospheres of ‘strange intimacy’ – in sensual, affective, and oddly intimate moments and settings where (...)
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  • Levinas' asymmetry and the question of women's oppression: Response to Borgerson's `Feminist ethical ontology'.M. Carmen Carrero de Salazar - 2008 - Feminist Theory 9 (1):109-115.
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  • Reading the Stranger of Asylum Law: Legacies of Communication and Ethics. [REVIEW]Toni A. M. Johnson - 2013 - Feminist Legal Studies 21 (2):119-139.
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