Title | Date | Views | Brief Description |
Responding to Non-Native Writers in Basic Writing Classes |
2010 |
2505 |
This study discusses how to best respond to non-native writers in Basic Writing classes in order to achieve the most effective learning outcomes. Beginning with an overview concerning how to respond to Basic Writers in general and more specifically n... |
The Writing I: Re-Articulating First-Person Narrative in the Composition Classroom |
2010 |
2472 |
This project analyzes the ways in which concepts of the student-writer have been politicized and pedagogically polemicized as either primarily personal or social categories. The pedagogical rhetoric of the personal narrative as a genre has followed t... |
“Something In This Slippery World That Can Hold”: A Trans Feminist Analysis Of Moby-Dick |
2017 |
3558 |
This paper argues that Moby-Dick dramatizes several long-standing issues that pertain to gender. The focus on trying to determine the objective truth of perceived reality and the motif of body modification combine to form a prescient exploration of m... |
The Divided Self in Brown, Poe and Melville |
2010 |
2886 |
Many critics have identified a sense of anxiety within the literary works of the Early National period. By using a hybrid of William James and Jaques Lacan’s approaches to the “Divided Self,” we see that this anxiety can be found internally, as key c... |
Don’t Make a Scene: The Representation of the Arthurian Love Triangle in the ‘English Tradition’ of Text and Film |
2011 |
9279 |
The Arthurian legend has been part of history through different mediums ranging from art to film. Though no one text can be identified as the origin of the Arthurian legend, several texts have come to the forefront of the Arthurian canon. The “Engl... |
Print Culture And The Roma In North America |
2021 |
453 |
This thesis contributes to the ongoing work of undoing the erasure of the historically marginalized Roma through a retrieval, taxonimization, and analysis of a variety of ephemeral North American printed texts from the eighteenth and nineteenth centu... |