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Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Searching For America: The Development Of The Immigrant Narrative Across Jewish, African, Cuban, And Korean American Literature, Amanda Maree Lawrence
Searching For America: The Development Of The Immigrant Narrative Across Jewish, African, Cuban, And Korean American Literature, Amanda Maree Lawrence
Doctoral Dissertations
Searching for America: The Development of the Immigrant Narrative across Jewish, African, Cuban, and Korean American Literature is a longitudinal study that traces and accounts for the development of immigrant literature within specific ethnic groups, focusing on how different generations rewrite the immigrant narrative of their own cultures. Considering multiple texts from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries by Jewish, African, Cuban, and Korean American authors, I examine the changing relationship between language or literary form and identity politics for each group. In addition to exploring individual patterns of development, I suggest ways in which these very different ethnic texts speak …
How The Hobbits Saved Civilization, Robert Moore-Jumonville
How The Hobbits Saved Civilization, Robert Moore-Jumonville
Inklings Forever: Published Colloquium Proceedings 1997-2016
No abstract provided.
Silent Music: The Letters Of Ruth Pitter, Don King
Silent Music: The Letters Of Ruth Pitter, Don King
Inklings Forever: Published Colloquium Proceedings 1997-2016
No abstract provided.
Jonathan Swift's Crimes Against Humanity Truth Or Fiction?, John J. Burke Jr.
Jonathan Swift's Crimes Against Humanity Truth Or Fiction?, John J. Burke Jr.
1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era
No abstract provided.
Death As Metaphor, Lawrence Kimmel
Death As Metaphor, Lawrence Kimmel
Philosophy Faculty Research
What remains to be said about the question and problem of death that has not been repeated a thousand times in the history of human thought and culture? Philosophers in the Western tradition have seemingly argued every nuance of the name, nature, causes, and consequences of death since Plato first took up the death of Socrates as the funding occasion of his philosophical life and thinking. Epicurean and Stoic philosophers subsequently framed the basic arguments that are still with us, directed to three basic questions concerning death: What is it? Is it good or bad? Should we fear it?
The Case For Open Immigration, Chandran Kukathas
The Case For Open Immigration, Chandran Kukathas
Research Collection School of Social Sciences
People favor or are opposed to immigration for a variety of reasons. It is therefore difficult to tie views about immigration to ideological positions. While it seems obviousthat political conservatives are the most unlikely to defend freedom of movement,and that socialists and liberals (classical and modern) are very likely to favor more openborders, in reality wariness (if not outright hostility) to immigration can be foundamong all groups. Even libertarian anarchists have advanced reasons to restrict themovement of peoples.