Interstudia Number 29. (2021)/ The Discourse of Hope
Bălinișteanu-Furdu, C.
enARE WOMEN AS PEACE WEAVERS THE SYMBOLS OF HOPE FOR THE ANGLO-SAXON SOCIETY?
Bellot, A.
enHOPE AND RECONCILIATION: HUMANITARIAN COOPERATION BETWEEN FORMER WAR ENEMIES
Bennani, I.
en“WHAT MATTERS IS THAT THE NOVEL GETS FINISHED”: WRITING HOPE IN EMNA RMILI’s SHATT LARWAH (THE SPIRITS’ BEACH)
Beşe, A.
enWOMEN AS HOPE OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN COMMUNITY IN AUGUST WILSON’S PLAYS
Hà, T.; Bellot, A.
enTEACHING THE VIETNAM WAR THROUGH LITERATURE: A RESEARCH AND PEDAGOGICAL PROPOSAL FOR HEALING AND PEACE EDUCATION
Lasa, C.; Menán, C.
enHOPE IN SHAKESPEARE’S LATE PIECES: THE CASE OF THE WINTER’S TALE
Mikhaylova, A.
enHOPE AS SELF-DETERMINED MOTIVATION
Garcia, E.
enRECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF HOPE: PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE PANDEMIC-FORCED RETURN TO SOCIALITY
Motornaya, S.
enTHE WORLD AFTER THE PANDEMIC: THE CONCEPT OF HOPE IN PSYCHOLOGICAL AND EDUCATIONAL DISCOURSE
Saad, T.; Arruri, R.
enOBAMA AND MCCAIN 2008 ELECTORAL CAMPAIGN AND THE NOTION OF HOPE: A SOCIO-COGNITIVE CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE REPRESENTATION OF SELF AND OTHER