İngiliz Dili ve Edebiyatı Bölümü / Department of English Language and Literature
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11413/6786
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Browsing İngiliz Dili ve Edebiyatı Bölümü / Department of English Language and Literature by Type "conferenceObject"
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Publication A Note on the Relation between Evidentiality and Free Choice(2006) Şener, Nilüfer; 112147Publication A Will of Its Own The Body Image in Hamlet(2004) Seval, Ayşem; 107616Publication ‘Adaptation as Appropriation: James Whale’s Frankenstein, 1931’(2010) Ceylan, Özlem Gülgün; 107801Publication All That Money Can Buy: Materialism in Bowen’s ’The Evil That Men Do –’(2016) Erdurucan, Büşra; 245880Publication Applying WE EIL based English language instruction in a university English course at a foundation university in Turkey(2010) Bayyurt Kerestecioğlu, Yasemin; ALTINMAKAS, DERYA; 10939; 107385Publication Appropriateness of Global Textbooks for Local Contexts: Teachers' Perceptions(2006) ALTINMAKAS, DERYA; 107385Publication Bone and Flesh, Death and Life: Representing the Human Body in Anil's Ghost(2019-04) TURAN, AYŞEGÜL; 273470Michael Ondaatje’s Anil’s Ghost portrays the events evolving around Anil Tissera, a forensic anthropologist who, after living in England and the US for fifteen years, returns to her homeland Sri Lanka as part of an international human rights group to help with the investigation of mass murders. Anil and Sarath, a local archaeologist, are to identify the victims of unknown extrajudicial executions, which proves difficult and dangerous in the volatile and violent atmosphere of Sri Lanka as represented by the discovery of a recently buried skeleton in an ancient burial site controlled by the army. In this paper, I will focus on the depictions of the body, specifically those of skeletons and bones, to examine the novel’s metonymic representation of the individual and collective memory. As the violence of civil war becomes etched onto human bodies, bones start to serve as a repository of cultural memory after death. In the novel, “Sailor,” the recently buried skeleton, stands for all those bodies that have disappeared under not-so-mysterious circumstances. In other words, the attempt to give the Sailor a name and a face becomes emblematic of the desire to acknowledge the loss and suffering as well as honoring the dead. I contend that in the novel, the conscious effort to strip the bodies of their identity and to anonymize them does not lead to their ultimate erasure from history; on the contrary they, through the lifeless bones, draw attention to this attempt and hence become an essential part of cultural memory.Publication Competing for Dominance: Power Dynamics in Ralph de Boissière’s Rum and Coca Cola(2014) TURAN, AYŞEGÜL; 273470Publication Conceptual Transition from EFL to ELF Business Professionals in Turkey(2013) Çeçen Besimoğlu, Sevdeğer; Serdar Tülüce, Hande; Yalçın, Serdar; ALTINMAKAS, DERYA; 29634; 107385; 203892; 184237Publication Publication Darts of Satan:’ Theatre as Evil in Tudor and Stuart England(2003) Seval, Ayşem; 107616Publication Defining and Defying Irishness in J.G. Farrell’s Troubles(2017) TURAN, AYŞEGÜL; 273470Publication Domain Vagueness and the Epistemic Background(Chicago Linguistic Society Publications, 2007) Şener, Nilüfer; 112147This paper shows that evidentials provide convenient environments for the manifestation of the domain vagueness requirement on Free Choice items such as herhangi bir in Turkish. In English, certain modals restrict the use of Free Choice any. Dayal (1998) suggests that this restriction is due to the domain vagueness requirement on this item. I demonstrate that in Turkish, speakers epistemic background regulates the legitimacy of Free Choice herhangi bir implying that vagueness is a basic property of this item. I propose that the interesting interaction of evidentials with Free Choice item herhangi bir can be accounted for by assuming Kratzer's (1987) theory of modal interpretation, Izvorski's (1997) account for evidentials and Dayal's (1998) proposal on Free Choice any.Publication Epistemic Restrictions on Free Choice Herhangi bir in Tukish(California State University, Fresno, 2007) Şener, Nilüfer; 112147Publication Exploring academic discourse socialisation of international undergraduate students in Turkey: a longitudinal case study(2018) ALTINMAKAS, DERYA; 107385Publication From Anatolia to India: Reading Halide Edib Adıvar’s The Shirt of Flame as The Daughter of Smyrna(2014) TURAN, AYŞEGÜL; 273470Publication From the Magistrate to the Barbarian: Transformation of the Magistrate in J.M. Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians(Power and Victimization - The Rhetoric of Sociopolitical Power and Representations of Victimhood in Contemporary Literature, 2006) TURAN, AYŞEGÜL; 273470; Oya Berk; Sırma Soran GumpertPublication Gingerbread-progeny:’ From Festive to Commercial Food in Ben Jonson’s Bartholomew Fair(2008) Seval, Ayşem; 107616Publication ’Her Idolatry will Deliver Us to the Devil:’ Religious and Sexual Identity in Linda McLean’s Glory on Earth(2018) Erdurucan, Büşra; 245880
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