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)

Noir Heterotopias and Spatial Discourse in Raymond Chandler’s The Big Sleep, Farewell, My Lovely and The Long Goodbye

Moein Moradi; Amir Ali Nojoumian

Volume 18, Issue 26 , July 2021, , Pages 247-266

https://doi.org/10.52547/clls.18.26.247

Abstract
  Using paradoxical spatializations, Raymond Chandler challenges the conventional representation of the Southern California region. The coexistence of heterogeneous elements in Chandler’s novels depicts a particular kind of mid-twentieth-century noir genre. These literary spaces, under epistemological ...  Read More

A Bourdieusian Study of Food and Socio-cultural Identity in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Purple Hibiscus

Maryam Moein Kharazi; Kaihan Bahmani

Volume 19, Issue 28 , July 2022, , Pages 247-270

https://doi.org/10.52547/clls.19.28.247

Abstract
  IntroductionCulinary literary criticism is a new field that has gathered interest among many scholars around the world. The cultural significance of gastronomic representations in literary texts is usually interconnected with the issues of gender, race, and class. The current study examines the relationship ...  Read More

Cognitive Dissonance and Cognitive Huge Leap in Ian McEwan’s Saturday: A Reconstruction of 9/11 Trauma

Lida Matin Parsa

Volume 17, Issue 25 , January 2021, , Pages 261-292

https://doi.org/10.52547/clls.17.25.261

Abstract
  A psycho-cultural study of 9/11 attack and its pertinent trauma, reflected in Ian McEwan’s Saturday illuminates the manipulated structures of cognition and cultural identity and the way the unreliable narrators in this narrative are causing cognitive dissonance through their socio-culturally-made ...  Read More

The Portrait of the Writer as a Mosaicist: Lucien Dällenbach's Mosaics in Virginia Woolf's Fragmentary Writing

Shafigheh Keivan

Volume 20, Issue 30 , July 2023, , Pages 261-280

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2023.103685

Abstract
  Introduction: With the advent of modernity, Mimesis and the classical art and literature proved to be no more the adequate methods of representation. Strongly conscious of the changes of her era, Virginia Woolf is one of the first writers of the twentieth century to have used and developed the "fragmentary ...  Read More

Eco- critical Reading of Swedenborgian Concepts in Blake`s Selected Poetry

Laiya Matin Parsa; Ali Salami

Volume 20, Issue 31 , January 2024, , Pages 263-285

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2023.233786.1218

Abstract
  Introduction     William Blake's long-lasting connection with Swedenborg has long been reflected by many researchers and it is impossible to examine the poet's works within the scope of ecological criticism without considering the importance of the Swedish philosopher in the formation ...  Read More

Bypassing the horror of death by the use of feminine writing: a study of The Balcony by Genet

bahare saghazade; Bahman Namvar Motlagh

Volume 18, Issue 27 , February 2022, , Pages 265-291

https://doi.org/10.52547/clls.18.27.265

Abstract
  The present study tries to investigate "femininity" and its relation to "death" in The Balcony by Jean Genet, with the help of Julia Kristeva and Maurice Blanchot’s views. These two concepts have always been abjected as "other" in the history of Western phallogocentrique thought. According to Hélène ...  Read More

The Effect of Digital Image Guide on EFL Learners’ Intercultural Communicative Competence

Musa Nushi; Saleh Rahimi; Fatemeh Rahimi

Volume 18, Issue 26 , July 2021, , Pages 267-298

https://doi.org/10.52547/clls.18.26.267

Abstract
  The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of digital image guide, a method of teaching in the field of visual literacy, on improving Iranian EFL learners’ intercultural communicative competence. This study employed quasi-experimental research design with pre-test/post-test control group. ...  Read More

Studying Spectrum Analysis in Fiction: Historical Residues in Thomas Pynchon’s V. and The Crying of Lot 49

Mahdi Nezami; Farid Parvaneh

Volume 19, Issue 28 , July 2022, , Pages 271-290

https://doi.org/10.52547/clls.19.28.271

Abstract
  Spectrum analysis revolves around the cultural works of the past that is due to the frequency and the residues of the past events. Spectrum analysis of the selected two novels, V. and The Crying of Lot 49, by Thomas Pynchon in the light of Michel Foucault’s Discourse Analysis and Jean Francois ...  Read More

Lived Experience of Pain: Memory and Consciousness A Case Study on the Character of Luzhin in Vladimir Nabokov’s The Defense (Zashchita Luzhina)

Leili Kafi; Kian Soheil; Keihan Bahmani; Newsha Ahmadi

Volume 20, Issue 30 , July 2023, , Pages 280-300

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2023.103686

Abstract
  Introduction: Pain as a positive phenomenon is rare in literary studies, especially in those related to Nabokov. This research, for the first time, discusses ideas of Damasio on emotions and consciousness and applies it to the character of Luzhin through close reading of the text to show how the individual’s ...  Read More

History of translations of Khayyam's Rubaiyat into German and study of formal-aesthetic Equivalence of literary translations based on examples of these translations

Faranak Hashemi

Volume 17, Issue 25 , January 2021, , Pages 293-322

https://doi.org/10.52547/clls.17.25.293

Abstract
  The translation of Persian Literature started in the 16th century in Germany. Due to historical and social changes, new translations, corrections, and adaptations of such works were made. One of the most well-known Persian works that has been translated numerous times over the centuries are the Rubaiyat ...  Read More

Ghetto and Punitive Containment: A Reflection on Caryl Phillips’s The Nature of Blood

Bahareh Nilforoshan; Bakhtiar Sadjadi; Fariba Parvizi; Farid Parvaneh

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 16 August 2023

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2023.103775

Abstract
  Introduction: Reading contemporary fiction through diverse disciplines appears to be a substantial part of narrative studies in particular and literature in general providing a tenable framework of interdisciplinary discourses of knowledge to study and explore fiction. Caryl Phillips’s The Nature ...  Read More

A Study of Levertov’s “A Tree Telling of Orpheus” in the Light of Merleau-Ponty’s Philosophy of Nature

Bahare Aarabi; Negar Sharif

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 16 August 2023

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2023.103776

Abstract
  Introduction: The industrial development and rapid economic growth of the United States in the mid-twentieth century pushed the concept of nature to the margins. It is presumed that the literary pieces made during this period ignored nature to the advantage of the multilateral development of the country. ...  Read More

Poetry of Witness: A Traumatic Reading of Carolyn Forché and Fady Joudah’s War Poetry

Seyedeh Yasaman Ghodsi; Narges Montakhabi; Razieh Eslamieh

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 06 December 2023

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2023.232048.1202

Abstract
  AbstractIntroductionAmong many others, the aftermath of the Cold War generated two poets whose works of art significantly impacted their traumatized audiences. Forché and Joudah are among those whose lives were altered following their visit to war zones. The former is known as an established, ...  Read More

Rereading the Concept of “Simulacra” in the Novel “I” by Wolfgang Hilbig

Narjes Khodaee

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 09 January 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.233243.1209

Abstract
  Introduction: During the 1990s, German literature saw an influx of writers who had lived through the East German regime. These authors reflected the events that led up to the Berlin Wall’s fall and Germany’s reunification. Wolfgang Hilbig’s novel, “I”, is a prominent example ...  Read More

A Study of Discourse Monitoring System in two Persian and English Literary Works Based on Comparative Discourse Analysis

Ali Mohammad Mohammadi; Morteza Abdoli

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 27 January 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.231898.1187

Abstract
  Introduction: Comparative discourse analysis is a branch of linguistics focusing on comparative study of languages, cultures, and discourses in terms of similar linguistic and metalinguistic variables in the construction and monitoring of discourse (Linha, 2022). Monitoring discourse is the analysis ...  Read More

Utilitarianism in contemporary French literature. Case study: Antoine Compagnon

Hassan Zokhtareh

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 29 January 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.232302.1192

Abstract
  Introduction: This article regards Antoine Compagnon as the embodiment of a movement that imbues literature with utility in the contemporary context. In his inaugural lecture, titled "What is Literature for?" delivered at the esteemed Collège de France, Compagnon argues that the era of inquiries ...  Read More

Free Case in German

Kaveh Bahrami Sobhani

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 06 February 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.234606.1232

Abstract
  IntroductionThe German language has four grammatical cases: Nominative (Nominativ)– subject, Accusative (Akkusativ)– direct object, Dative (Dativ)– indirect object, and Genitive (Genitiv)– possessive. Grammatical case is mostly responsible for determining the syntactic-semantic ...  Read More

A Study of Narrativity Through Semantic Square and Narrative Program in the Novel "If Only It Were True" by Marc Levy

Mitra Moradi; Ali Abbassi

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 11 February 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.234539.1231

Abstract
  IntroductionGreimas, as the most famous theoretician of "narrative semantics", believes that the structure of a narrative, like the structure of a sentence, has its own grammar. By presenting some models such as action pattern, narrative program, semantic square, etc., he tries to structure the relationships ...  Read More

Comparative Analysis of Symbolic Plays: Pinter's 'Birthday Party' and Saadi's 'Honeymoon

Hesam Khalouei; Mohammadsadegh Basiri; Najme Hosseini Sarvari

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 14 February 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.234480.1228

Abstract
  Introduction:The term "Absurd" in dictionaries refers to something irrational, illogical, or nonsensical from a rational or conventional standpoint. However, the title of Absurdist Theater "is not derived from the definition of the term according to the dictionary; rather, it was first used in a book ...  Read More

Theories of translation of children and young adults’ books and their application in Hoshang Moradi Kermani’s stories "Khomreh" and "Chakmeh" in German language

Faranak Hashemi

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 02 March 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.234703.1233

Abstract
  IntroductionTranslation of texts with native and cultural content has always been a big challenge for translators. It seems that we are facing two problems: first, the translator‘s correct understanding of the original text, and second, the correct and comprehensible translation of native and cultural ...  Read More

An Interdisciplinary Research on the Improvisation of Power, Tyranny and Chaos in William Shakespeare's Richard III

Azita Zamani; Zahra Bordbari; Javad Yaghoobi Derabi

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 20 March 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.234973.1236

Abstract
  IntroductionThe present research examines Greenblatt's theories on the improvisation of power and tyranny in Shakespeare's play Richard III, considering Hayles and Slethaug's ideas of chaos theory. The focus is on the nonviolent psychological control achieved through empathy using displacement and absorption. ...  Read More

Study of “All those things we didn’t say to each other” according to literary geography and cartography

Azadeh HAKAMI; Ali Abbassi

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 03 April 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.234546.1230

Abstract
  IntroductionLiterary geography examines geography and literary places in relation to each other. This aspect of thematic criticism tries to examine the relationship between the writer's&the reader's mind with Collot's approach; He believes that the outside narrates the inside. In this research, we ...  Read More

Environmental Narratives: Egalitarian Philosophy and Ecosophophy in Denying Anthropocentrism in Virginia Woolf’s Orlando

Ziba Roshanzamir; Leila Baradaran Jamili; Bahman Zarrinjooee

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 06 April 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.234821.1235

Abstract
  Introduction: This research aims to analyze Virginia Woolf (1882-1942)’s Orlando: A Biography (1928) based on environmental narrative, egalitarian philosophy and ecosophy to criticize anthropocentrism. The theoretical framework is mainly based on Arne Naess’s philosophies of egalitarianism ...  Read More

Exploring Julia Kristeva’s Theory of Abjection in Gholam Hossein Saedi’s The Dump

Yasaman Mokarrami Rostami; Alireza Farahbakhsh

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 18 April 2024

https://doi.org/10.48308/clls.2024.235102.1238

Abstract
  Introduction: In Julia Kristeva’s conception of the abject, anything that falls outside the normativity of a dominant system is dubbed as repulsive and deplorable. Abject subjects are the subjects who are rejected by society because of their heterogeneity; ironically, sometimes they resort to crime ...  Read More