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المجلة المغاربية للمخطوطات

Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://ddeposit.univ-alger2.dz/handle/20.500.12387/2426

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    The Legend Of Zelda And Self-efficacy: A Link To Self-directed Learning
    (des archives - Actualités des archives - Faculté des sciences humaines, Université Al-Jair, 2 Abou Al-Qasim Saad Allah, 2023-12-21) Belazouz Asma
    bstract Video games are thought to meet self-directed learning expectations, improve specific skills and capabilities, and inform about self-efficacy. The Legend of Zelda game franchise is amongst the most popular and massively played games since 1986. It mostly comprises exploration-based games containing action-adventure, strategy, and puzzle elements. This paper investigates how The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild (2017), a massive open-world Zelda, is designed to include self-directed learning skills, such as self-efficacy, that increase students’ sense of autonomy and unlock their learning potentials.
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    Resistance And Forgiveness: Exploring Patriarchy And Oppression In Megan Giddings’ The Women Could Fly (2022)
    (des archives - Actualités des archives - Faculté des sciences humaines, Université Al-Jair, 2 Abou Al-Qasim Saad Allah, 2025-01-01) Badaoui Meriem; Belazouz Asma
    This research delves into the themes of patriarchy, oppression, and forgiveness within Megan Giddings’ novel, The Women Could Fly (2022), examining how they intersect within the context of capitalist-led society. Drawing on feminist and Marxist analyses, the study explores how patriarchy, operating within a capitalist framework, systematically marginalizes and oppresses women in general, and black women in particular. Through an analysis of Giddings’ dystopian narrative, the paper elucidates the ways in which female characters resist patriarchal oppression while also grappling with forgiveness in the face of systemic injustice. It discusses the complex interplay between power dynamics, gender relations, and capitalist structures, highlighting the ongoing struggle for women’s empowerment within a society that privileges men and perpetuates inequality. It also recognizes how issues related to both women and nature interconnect in such narratives associating supernatural powers to emancipation endeavors. The paper confirms, as portrayed in the contemporary narrative under study, that patriarchy continues to be the dominant power in capitalism.