Arts of the contact zone mary louise pratt summary

Mary Louise Pratt (born 1948) is a Silver Professor and Professor of Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literatures at New York University. She received her B.A. in Modern Languages and Literatures from the University of Toronto in 1970, her M.A. in Linguistics from the University of Illinois at Urbana in 1971, and her PhD in Comparative Literature from Stanford University in 1975.

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  • ماري لويز برات (بالإنجليزية: Mary Louise Pratt)‏ أستاذة مرموقة حاصلة على درجة أستاذ سيلفر –نسبةً إلى يوليوس سيلفر المحامي ورجل الخير الذي ساهم في إنشاء جامعة نيويورك حيث تم تخصيص منح دراسية ومناصب في الجامعة العريقة تحمل اسمه- فضلًا عن كونها أستاذة في اللغة الإسبانية والبرتغالية والآداب بجامعة نيويورك. حصلت على بكالوريويس الأدب واللغات المُعاصرة من جامعة تورنتو عام 1970، وشهادة الماجستير في اللغويات من جامعة إلينوي بـأوروبا عام 1971، أما شهادة الدكتوراه في الأدب المقارن فقد حصلت عليها برات من جامعة ستانفورد عام 1975. حقق كتابها الأول، ، إسهامات عظيمة في النظرية النقدية من خلال التظاهرات حيث يمكننا رؤية مؤسسة الأدب السردي التحريري على شكل . حيث استخدمت برات

    Language Ecology, Language Politics: Towards a Geolinguistic Imagination

    What will the world look like linguistically a hundred years from now? The use and distribution of languages across the planet is changing so quickly that even experts cannot answer this question. This lecture will discuss some of the processes of change that are under way, including language death, language migration, and the formation of lingua francas and interlanguages. It will ask what the idea of rights can and cannot do in this context and consider what an ecological approach to language might involve.

    Biography

    Mary Louis Pratt is Silver Professor in the Department of Social and Cultural Analysis and the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at New York University, where she teaches Latin American literature and cultural theory. She holds degrees in comparative literature and linguistics from the University of Toronto, the University of Illinois, and Stanford University. She has published extensively on the subjects of Latin American women's writing; travel literature and imperialism; language and

    Mary Louise Pratt

    Rebellious Apprentice Devours Maestros: Is It Hunger or Vengeance?

    Born in 1814, daughter of a Spanish father and a creole mother, Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda gre... more Born in 1814, daughter of a Spanish father and a creole mother, Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda grew up in comfort and privilege in Camaguey, Cuba, educated by private tutors. In 1836, at the age of twenty-two, she emigrated with her mother and brother to Spain1 where, over the next two decades, she produced most of her extraordinary obra. By the early 1840s, nicknamed “La Peregrina” (pilgrim or wanderer), she was already established as one of Spain’s most celebrated literary figures, famed as a playwright, novelist, poet, autobiographer, essayist, and journalist. Her patrons included eminences of the Spanish literary scene, above all José Zorrilla, who introduced her into Madrid’s literary circles and nominated her to the Spanish Royal Academy in 1853. In 1859, Gómez de Avellaneda’s trajectory took her back to Cuba on assignment with her husband, royal envoy Domingo Verdugo y Massieu. Contrar

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