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    <title>'Oroonoko' - Tagged Articles - Inquiries Journal</title>
    <link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/keyword/oroonoko</link>
    <description>Inquiries Journal provides undergraduate and graduate students around the world a platform for the wide dissemination of academic work over a range of core disciplines.</description>
    <language>en-us</language>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2026 06:57:36 -0400</pubDate>
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				<title>Aristocratism and Authoritative Politics in Behn&#39;s &quot;Oroonoko&quot;: The Existential and Socio-Political Semiotics of Death and Torture</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/1644/aristocratism-and-authoritative-politics-in-behns-oroonoko-the-existential-and-socio-political-semiotics-of-death-and-torture</link>
				<description>By Conner R. Hayes - Aphra Behn&amp;rsquo;s Oroonoko offers a complex representation of the semiotic and socio-political meaning of seventeenth-century torture and death and the intersectional manner in which physical agony coincides with authoritative colonial politics. The novella&amp;rsquo;s protagonist, Oroonoko, is hyperbolically described in terms of his Eurocentric physicality and aristocratic traits; this descriptive treatment reinforces his singularity from his slave peers and objectifies him as the subject of their mass spectatorship. His sharp physical, cultural, and ideological divergence from the collective slave...</description>
				<pubDate>Tue, 30 May 2017 09:28 EDT</pubDate>
				<guid>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/1644/aristocratism-and-authoritative-politics-in-behns-oroonoko-the-existential-and-socio-political-semiotics-of-death-and-torture</guid>
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				<title>Persuasion and Agency in Aphra Behn&#39;s &quot;Oroonoko&quot;</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/519/persuasion-and-agency-in-aphra-behns-oroonoko</link>
				<description>By Tristan  Gans - Aphra Behn&amp;rsquo;s 1688 novel Oroonoko leaves many questions unanswered.[1] In one of many seeming contradictions within the text, one wonders how Behn, personally victimized by Charles II and an economic system that sought to disenfranchise her,[2] would glorify a socio-political system that affirmed not just masculine dominance, but the essential and innate authority of a male whose moral and political agenda enforces the oppression of her gender; furthermore, her de facto assertion of authority as both the creator of the work and an influential character implies a certain amount of agency and...</description>
				<pubDate>Wed, 27 Apr 2011 08:45 EDT</pubDate>
				<guid>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/519/persuasion-and-agency-in-aphra-behns-oroonoko</guid>
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