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    STUDIA PHILOLOGIA - Issue no. 1 / 2021  
         
  Article:   LIMINAL SPACES AND THE ECOMORPHIC SELF IN ALISTAIR MACLEOD’S NOVA SCOTIAN NARRATIVES * SPAȚII LIMINALE ȘI SINELE ECOMORFIC ÎN POVESTIRILE LUI ALISTAIR MACLEOD.

Authors:  OCTAVIAN MORE.
 
       
         
  Abstract:  
DOI: 10.24193/subbphilo.2021.1.19

Published Online: 2021-03-20
Published Print: 2021-03-30
pp. 265-280


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ABSTRACT: Liminal Spaces and the Ecomorphic Self in Alistair MacLeod’s Short Stories. Starting from the observation that Cape Breton Island, the distinctive setting of Alistair MacLeod’s fiction, is a “borderland” lying at the intersection of complementary elements (past – present, tradition – individuality, humans – environment), this paper proposes a general discussion of liminality in the author’s work as well as a close reading of two of his short stories, “The Road to Rankin’s Point” and “Island”, with the aim of highlighting how a relational, ecomorphic self-arises in the wake of symbolic encounters that lead to a reassessment of the subject’s position within their biological and cultural milieu.

Key words: Alistair MacLeod, Cape Breton, liminality, borderlands, ecomorphism
 
         
     
         
         
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