Since intersemiotic translation continues to maintain its popularity even among the younger generation, this paper examines the way in which Canadian identity is portrayed in the most recent film adaptation of the beloved piece of children’s literature, Anne of Green…
COMMUNITY AFFAIRS: REWRITING THE TEMPEST IN THE SERVICE OF ART AND CIVILISATION – Marian Rebei
William Shakespeare’s The Tempest comes across as an inviting and resourceful ground that has prompted a range of (re-)reading perspectives and creative appropriations. The reworking of the original plot, characters, motifs, themes and ideas originates in geographical, cultural, social and…
THE POWER OF STORYTELLING: FOLKLORIC ARCHETYPES AND THEIR INFLUENCE ON CHARACTER SHAPING IN FELICIA LUNA LEMUS’ TRACE ELEMENTS OF RANDOM TEA PARTIES – Martina Braunegger
The stories we are told while growing up influence our personality and contribute to the shaping of our identity. Fairy tales, witches, curses and beautiful princesses accompany us throughout our lives, regardless of where we grew up and how we…
TRUE NAMES, TRUE NYMS. THE POWER OF TECHNOLOGY AND THE FUTURE OF IDENTITY – Enrico Beltramini
This essay argues that for cypherpunk activists, the power of technology over individuals and the nature of people’s identity provide the points of difference with cyberpunk writers. For the cyberpunks, identities are framed in context, so that an aggressive elite…