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Papers by Anita Dimitrijovska-Jankulovska
SCIENCE International Journal
One of the key postcolonial themes in the novel is the struggle for identity. Etsuko, the main ch... more One of the key postcolonial themes in the novel is the struggle for identity. Etsuko, the main character, is a Japanese woman who has been living in England for many years. She is caught between two cultures and struggles to reconcile her Japanese heritage with her British identity. Her daughter Niki, on the other hand, is a second-generation immigrant who grew up in England and feels disconnected from her Japanese heritage. Through their stories, Ishiguro explores the complexities of identity and the challenges faced by individuals belonging to multiple cultures. Through their stories, Ishiguro explores the complexities of identity and the challenges faced by individuals belonging to multiple cultures. The novel A Pale View of the Hills by Kazuo Ishiguro explores themes of hybridity and Otherness through the lens of the main character, Etsuko. Hybridity refers to the mixing of different cultures and identities, while otherness refers to the experience of being perceived as differen...
SCIENCE International Journal, Mar 16, 2023
SCIENCE International Journal
In this paper the category of Otherness has been concerned for those who occupy the subordinate p... more In this paper the category of Otherness has been concerned for those who occupy the subordinate position in society, which have been presented as inferior in terms of knowledge and abilities, which implies that they need the leadership of those who are, by definition, more capable, more educated, more advanced, more civilized, more merciful, etc. On this way, the hierarchy of representations is established, thus justifying the existing ones power relations in society as well as the unequal treatment of those who are represented as inferior. The concept of Otherness within the framework of postcolonial criticism is used to describe the rest of the world, i.e., everything that does not fall within the scope of Europeans, as one homogeneous mass characterized by ugly features. Otherness in postcolonial criticism refers to colonized peoples who are marginalized by the imperial and identified by their difference from the center. Any area that is not part of European soil is considered in...
Abstract Turning the present into the past creates traces, bracelets, social ties that bind the ... more Abstract
Turning the present into the past creates traces, bracelets, social ties that bind the entities in a group of a nation that belongs to a collective identity that is recognizable to the structures and features of a nation through narratives and experiences of its people. The creation of a collective identity derived from prehistoric human need to belong to a group to be part of a greater whole. Collective identity is not fixed but is constantly creating - ethnic identification that reshape the processes of socialization. In the process of ethnicization and socialization of ethnicity through cultural and biographical differences of a nation we are being a different collective. In our Macedonian formation of itself which geographically belong to Europe (as Derrida would say) among others we are Europeans as well, belonging to a collective European identity. But, how?
In this scientific paper I will try to present that through the playwrights of Jordan Plevnesh: Erigon and Happiness is a New Idea in Europe. Through the key matrix of European civilization in Happiness is a New Idea in Europe through a female character-Europe, the old continent is represented by its tragedies. Our collective genetic images presented in the play Erigon, shown with the metaphor of fear, in a search for the identity of those people who ran from the cemetery to European streets, followed by Mrs. Dibua-decadent Europe, which only advises and promises, but fulfills nothing. Each character carries the collective tragedy as a reminder that debts must be repaid, because if the homeland does not do that no one else will do.
Key words : collective identity , ethnic, differences , backgrounds, collective tragedy
SCIENCE International Journal
One of the key postcolonial themes in the novel is the struggle for identity. Etsuko, the main ch... more One of the key postcolonial themes in the novel is the struggle for identity. Etsuko, the main character, is a Japanese woman who has been living in England for many years. She is caught between two cultures and struggles to reconcile her Japanese heritage with her British identity. Her daughter Niki, on the other hand, is a second-generation immigrant who grew up in England and feels disconnected from her Japanese heritage. Through their stories, Ishiguro explores the complexities of identity and the challenges faced by individuals belonging to multiple cultures. Through their stories, Ishiguro explores the complexities of identity and the challenges faced by individuals belonging to multiple cultures. The novel A Pale View of the Hills by Kazuo Ishiguro explores themes of hybridity and Otherness through the lens of the main character, Etsuko. Hybridity refers to the mixing of different cultures and identities, while otherness refers to the experience of being perceived as differen...
SCIENCE International Journal, Mar 16, 2023
SCIENCE International Journal
In this paper the category of Otherness has been concerned for those who occupy the subordinate p... more In this paper the category of Otherness has been concerned for those who occupy the subordinate position in society, which have been presented as inferior in terms of knowledge and abilities, which implies that they need the leadership of those who are, by definition, more capable, more educated, more advanced, more civilized, more merciful, etc. On this way, the hierarchy of representations is established, thus justifying the existing ones power relations in society as well as the unequal treatment of those who are represented as inferior. The concept of Otherness within the framework of postcolonial criticism is used to describe the rest of the world, i.e., everything that does not fall within the scope of Europeans, as one homogeneous mass characterized by ugly features. Otherness in postcolonial criticism refers to colonized peoples who are marginalized by the imperial and identified by their difference from the center. Any area that is not part of European soil is considered in...
Abstract Turning the present into the past creates traces, bracelets, social ties that bind the ... more Abstract
Turning the present into the past creates traces, bracelets, social ties that bind the entities in a group of a nation that belongs to a collective identity that is recognizable to the structures and features of a nation through narratives and experiences of its people. The creation of a collective identity derived from prehistoric human need to belong to a group to be part of a greater whole. Collective identity is not fixed but is constantly creating - ethnic identification that reshape the processes of socialization. In the process of ethnicization and socialization of ethnicity through cultural and biographical differences of a nation we are being a different collective. In our Macedonian formation of itself which geographically belong to Europe (as Derrida would say) among others we are Europeans as well, belonging to a collective European identity. But, how?
In this scientific paper I will try to present that through the playwrights of Jordan Plevnesh: Erigon and Happiness is a New Idea in Europe. Through the key matrix of European civilization in Happiness is a New Idea in Europe through a female character-Europe, the old continent is represented by its tragedies. Our collective genetic images presented in the play Erigon, shown with the metaphor of fear, in a search for the identity of those people who ran from the cemetery to European streets, followed by Mrs. Dibua-decadent Europe, which only advises and promises, but fulfills nothing. Each character carries the collective tragedy as a reminder that debts must be repaid, because if the homeland does not do that no one else will do.
Key words : collective identity , ethnic, differences , backgrounds, collective tragedy