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Volume 4 Number 11 November 2018

Critical Study of Joyce’s Novel “A Portrait of the Artist as a Youngman” In The Light of Modernistic Theory


Authors: Wahid Pervez ; Mubarak Ali Lashari ; M. K. Sangi
Pages: 193-197
DOI: doi.org/10.32861/ellr.411.193.197
Abstract
The present study focuses on the aspects of modernism found in the novel. The most findable aspects of modernism are individualism, stream of consciousness, exile, and loss of faith. This paper highlights the role of modernism in changing thoughts and ways of living. Moreover, it describes modernism as the opener of new door for the people determined to get rid out of the boundaries of family, religion and country. Individualism is the centre of modernistic novel around which all aspects of it revolve. How modern novels give preference the inner self of an individual to society’s nets and obstacle? This paper discusses in detail the quest of the protagonist of the novel Dedalus who is in search of new ways to see men’s role in the world.



Equivalence in the Vietnamese Translation of John Green's the Fault in Our Stars


Authors: Nguyen Thi Hoang Oanh
Pages: 189-192
DOI: doi.org/10.32861/ellr.411.189-192
Abstract
Equivalence, one of the most important procedures, has become a central issue in Translation Studies. This study compares the John Green’s the novel The Fault in Our Stars and the Vietnamese translation by Huy Hoang Nguyen to find out the types of equivalence. From an objective and subjective point of view, there is no unique type of equivalence in the Vietnamese Translation; it is a mixture because of the orientation of choosing the translator’s equivalences by the influence of cultural, linguistic differences, and the translator’s ability. Along with that, the study investigates the domestication and foreignization in achieving equivalence in Vietnamese version of the novel.



Alienation and Feminism in Shakespeare’s Macbeth and Lessing’s The Grass Is Singing: A Comparative Study


Authors: Md. Amir Hossain
Pages: 179-188
DOI: doi.org/10.32861/ellr.411.179.188
Abstract
The objective of this study is to focus on the investigation of William Shakespeare’s Macbeth and Doris Lessing’s The Grass Is Singing in the perspective of alienation and feminism. It aims at examining mainly Shakespeare’s and Lessing’s treatment of women in the light of the social system of 16th -century England and 20th -century Africa, respectively. It proposes to incorporate a wide variety of related, but diverse and even contradictory elements, centering on the subject of gender, social, political, economic, and cultural issues, fragmentation of society, love and marriage, psychological conflict, divorce, and sexuality. Both Shakespeare’s and Lessing’s texts are analyzed within the parameters of these issues. It throws a new light on the critical comments made by critics, scholars, and reviewers with a view to analyzing the complex ramifications of the theory of alienation and feminism. It also attempts to examine outlooks, autobiographical elements, writing forms, similarities and differences in various phases of the two writers. In this way, it aims to prove a concluding remark that a symbiotic relationship of the theorists and the authors is not only self-perpetuating, but also important for the 21st -century English literature.



Enhancing College Students’ Speaking Under the Context of Multimodality


Authors: Jinxiu Jing
Pages: 175-178
DOI: doi.org/10.32861/ellr.411.175.178
Abstract
How a teacher presents information and motivates students to talk in English can seriously decide the efficiency of an English class; therefore, teachers need to explore sufficient approaches to stimulate students to talk. Coaching students to be involved in the process of communication can greatly satisfy individualized English learning. The author here will analyze teaching speaking based on multimodality and put forward some suggestions for English learners and teachers.