Browsing by Author "Ross, Shawna"
Now showing items 1-8 of 8
-
Ahn, Somi (2019-03-18)This study investigates how various age metaphors from a vampire to mandatory euthanasia function to invalidate linear progressions of both individuals and society in fin-desiècle British literature. It explains how and ...
-
Black, Christopher (2021-07-26)The history of philosophy has been characterized by a suspicion of technology. Discourses surrounding technology—from the pre-Socratics to the present—often position technology as an external other and as something that ...
-
Kim, Hoyeol (2022-04-19)This dissertation is article-based, consisting of four chapters with two themes: colorization (chapters 1 & 2) and sentiment analysis (chapters 3 & 4). Chapter 1, “Victorian400: Colorizing Victorian Illustrations,” reveals ...
-
Black, Christopher David (2019-07-17)This thesis provides an original analysis of the writings of American poet Theodore Roethke (1908-1963). Specifically, this thesis argues that in order to be more fully understood Roethke’s writings ought to be examined ...
-
Yi, Ungyung (2022-07-22)This dissertation recontextualizes the meaning of confession and its relation to the public and publicity by exploring postwar American poets Elizabeth Bishop (1911–1979), Anne Sexton, (1928–1974), and Frank O’Hara ...
-
Ross, Shawna (The Henry James Review, 2015)This essay draws parallels between the intellectual labor of the Jamesian narrator and that of social media user, both of whom use similar techniques to arrange and interpret data streams (consciousness, expression, dialogue, ...
-
Choi, Seokyeong (2021-07-14)This dissertation explores the ethics of impossible narration in its struggle to represent an unknowable other as a thread in modernist novels. I coin the term ‘unknowable’ other in response to Emmanuel Levinas’ ethics as ...
-
Nutt, Taylor S (2016-07-05)In his novel A Farewell to Arms, Ernest Hemingway asserts that the experience of war “breaks down time, language, and the perceived unity of the subjective self in the face of incomprehensible violence” (Hemingway 83). His ...