
Interstudia, n°13/2013
MARGINS, MARGINALIZATION
AND THE DISCOURSE OF MARGINALITY
Alma Mater Publishing House, Bacău
ISBN 20653204
Persons in charge of the current issue: Cătălina Bălinişteanu, Elena Ciobanu, Raluca Galiţa
Margin(s) of society, marginalization as a social process, or global marginalization (brought about by European colonization, or/and as well as by localized hegemonic systems), exclusion-inclusion, centre-periphery, marginal experience, new ‘Othering’, have increasingly gained importance in cultural studies and discourse analyses. Within such a frame, the discourse about marginality (involving new topographies) and of marginality (referring to textual and discursive constructs and meanings, dominant readings, new ways of thinking about the social relations, such as feminism, for example) needs to be reconsidered.
The articles in this volume seek to explore the definition of margins and marginalization, as well as the assumptions about the center/margin power structure, since analyzing the phenomenon of marginalization is not only a survey of a unit of society (the margin) but also an examination of the relationship between textual representation and claims to power.
The volume contains three sections, which offer a multitude of interpretations of the topic of margins, marginalization and the discourse of marginality. The first section of the volume includes articles approaching the topic from the perspective of literature and cultural studies. The articles in the second section of the volume deal with the topic of margins, marginalization and the discourse of marginality as evident in linguistics and cultural studies. The articles in the third section of the volume deal with margins, marginalization and the discourse of marginality in translation studies.
CONTENTS
FOREWORD
MARGINS, MARGINALIZATION AND THE DISCOURSE OF MARGINALITY IN LITERATURE AND CULTURAL STUDIES
Ahmet Beşe
Monologue as a Discourse of Marginality in Contemporary American Drama
Ahmet Beşe, Deniz Aras
Cultural Spaces and Marginality in A Raisin in the Sun
Cătălina Bălinişteanu
Welcoming the Americans within the Post-communist Margins
Ioana Boghian
Children and the Discourse of Marginality in 19th-century English Novels
Cristina Chifane
The Impact of Marginalization in Joseph Conrad’s Tales and Novels
Elena Ciobanu
On the Margin of Meaning – American Conceptual Poetry
Oana Cogeanu
On the Margin of Blackness
Mihaela Culea
From Marginality to Celebrity in Enlightenment English Culture:
The Case of Peter The Wild Boy
Nicoleta Ifrim
Identity Dilemmas in the Post-totalitarian Romanian Critique
Diana-Gabriela Popa Lupu
Male Marginality in Henry James`s International Novels
Ioan Sava
Marginalization in Postcolonial Thinking
Andreia Irina Suciu
Margins and Mergings in Maxine Hong Kingston’s The Woman Warrior
M. Başak Uysal, Kübra Baysal
The Other Renaissance: Revival of the Authentic Women
MARGINS, MARGINALIZATION AND THE DISCOURSE OF MARGINALITY IN LINGUISTICS AND CULTURAL STUDIES
Raluca Galiţa, Elena Bonta
Gypsies: a Linguistic Construction of Their Marginality in
English Newspapers Headlines
Mihaela Hriban
Xenisms with English Etymon in Journalistic Language
Svitlana Motorna
Marginalization and the Evolution of Consciousness
Lavinia Nǎdrag, Alina Buzarna-Tihenea Gǎlbeazǎ, Alina Stan
A Legal Language Issue: Law as “Masculine Culture”
Roxana-Iuliana Popescu
Linguistic Margins and Nuclei in Discourse
MARGINS, MARGINALIZATION AND THE DISCOURSE OF MARGINALITY IN TRANSLATION STUDIES
Mariya Bolshakova
The Cultural Marginality of an Interpreter
Mircea Horubet
Centre and Periphery in the Process of Translating
Monica Şerban
The ‘Self’ vs. the ‘Other’ in Translation
BOOK REVIEW
Responsable : Simina Mastacan
Url de référence :
http://portal.ub.ro/
Adresse : Université «Vasile Alecsandri» de Bacău, 8, rue Spiru Haret, Bacău, Roumanie