Volume 20 (2023)
Volume 19 (2022)
Volume 18 (2021)
Volume 17 (2020)
Volume 16 (2019)
Volume 15 (2018)
Volume 14 (2018)
Volume 13 (2017)
Volume 12 (2016)
Volume 11 (2015)
Volume 10 (2015)
Volume 7 (2014)
Volume 6 (2013)
Volume 5 (2012)
Volume 4 (2012)
Volume 3 (2010)
Volume 2 (2009)
Volume 1 (2008)
Facilitating the Process of Integration to Host Culture for Female Immigrants through Hybridized Identities in Mohsin Hamid’s Exit West

Hoda Shabrang; Bahare Tajik

Volume 20, Issue 31 , January 2024, , Pages 13-32

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2023.103777

Abstract
  IntroductionNowadays, speaking about immigration and its consequences is a controversial topic of many academic groups. The rise of postcolonialism and immigration has led to indescribable changes in world public affairs. In the field of immigration studies, the individual experiences of women in the ...  Read More

The Reflection of Ideological and Anti-ideological Discourses in V.S. Naipaul’s A Bend in the River

Hoda Shabrang

Volume 19, Issue 28 , July 2022, , Pages 199-218

https://doi.org/10.52547/clls.19.28.199

Abstract
  IntroductionThe key terms “hegemony” and “counter-hegemony” were first suggested by Antonio Gramsci to describe the soft power in the hands of the ruling system. In Gramsci’s definition, hegemony is related to those discourses in which the ruling system’s values are ...  Read More

Violence and Racism in Toni Morrison’s A Mercy, Paradise, and God Help the Child in the View of Slavoj Žižek

Aliakbar Pormouzeh; Hoda Shabrang

Volume 17, Issue 25 , January 2021, , Pages 187-210

https://doi.org/10.52547/clls.17.25.187

Abstract
  The present study in an analysis of violence and racism in the three novels of Tony Morison in light of Slavoj Žižek (1949-) theory of violence. Subjective violence refers to visible crime and terror in the social and individual level. Objective violence is both visible and invisible, manifested in ...  Read More

The Artistic Creation of an Immigrant Artist in a Hybridized Atmosphere: The Interplay of Cultural Signs

Hoda Shabrang

Volume 16, Issue 22 , March 2019, , Pages 99-118

https://doi.org/10.29252/clls.16.22.99

Abstract
  Immigration experience is always accompanied by tension and conflict. In other words, the immigrant is always under a double paradoxical command. The host asks the immigrant to assimilate into its culture, yet simultaneously it orders him to keep a distance which results in the “paradox of assimilation ...  Read More