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Mythic Background, Erwin F. Cook Jan 2020

Mythic Background, Erwin F. Cook

Classical Studies Faculty Research

Myth, according to a well known formulation by Walter Burkert, “is a traditional tale with secondary, partial reference to something of collective importance” (1979: 23). Andrew von Hendy, who declares Burkert’s definition the “gold standard” in classical studies, offers a Marxist reformulation, so that myth “is traditional narrative with a high degree of ideological saturation” (2002: 269, 277). This definition accords with the fact that muthos, the Greek word that most closely approximates myth, also designates “story” generally, and, as we might expect in an oral culture, “speech” (its meaning of “fiction” is post-Homeric). It also allows …


Blurring The Lines: The Ambiguity Of Gender And Sexuality In Ulysses, Samantha Heffner Jan 2017

Blurring The Lines: The Ambiguity Of Gender And Sexuality In Ulysses, Samantha Heffner

The Expositor: A Journal of Undergraduate Research in the Humanities

One of the most memorable episodes in James Joyce’s Ulysses occurs in the “Circe” chapter, when Leopold Bloom is transformed into a woman during his masochistic encounter with Bella Cohen, who herself transforms into a man. This gender swap is often cited as the culmination of Bloom’s feminine nature in the novel—not only is he the “new womanly man,” but he has also literally become a new woman (16.1798-1799). Such a confusion of gender has inspired a wide array of responses as critics attempt to wrestle with this rather confusing—if endearing—modern Ulysses. Bloom’s effeminate nature has also given rise to …


The Terror Exception: The Impact Of The 2001 Authorization For Use Of Military Force On United States Counterterrorism Policy In The Middle East Under The Obama Administration, Benjamin Collinger Oct 2016

The Terror Exception: The Impact Of The 2001 Authorization For Use Of Military Force On United States Counterterrorism Policy In The Middle East Under The Obama Administration, Benjamin Collinger

Undergraduate Student Research Awards

In the traumatic and somber aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the U.S. Congress passed a critical piece of legislation to provide the president authority to defend the United States and its interests abroad. The Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF), which responded to the horrors of 9/11, began the United States’ longest war—the global war on terror— and serves as its legal basis today. President George W. Bush signed the AUMF into law on September 18, 2001, only a week after the attacks. Congress agreed with the proposition:

That the President is authorized to use all …


The Future Of Joyce's A Portrait: The Künstlerroman And Hope, David Rando Jan 2016

The Future Of Joyce's A Portrait: The Künstlerroman And Hope, David Rando

English Faculty Research

This essay aims to capture some of the future effects that result from A Portrait's manipulation the artist novel genre. Drawing on Ernst Bloch's distinctions between the detective and the artist novel genres, this essay views A Portrait as a hybrid of both genres, at once obsessed with detective fiction's 'darkness at the beginning' (as emblematized by Stephen's anxiety surrounding the Foetus inscription) and the artist novel's 'not-yet' (as emblematized by the wish image of Stephen's green rose). A Portrait's status as an artist novel is complicated by Stephen's reprisal in Ulysses, but this essay argues that, …


Pride And Prejudice Ubd [9th Grade], Heather M. Patillo, Amy R. Thomson Jun 2014

Pride And Prejudice Ubd [9th Grade], Heather M. Patillo, Amy R. Thomson

Understanding by Design: Complete Collection

This is an eight week unit for freshman students on a daily 45 minute schedule; it is intended for the Pre-AP level. This unit focuses on personal/hidden agendas in writing, using characterization to find theme and purpose, evaluating/changing first impressions, and writing sophisticated literary analysis. The transfer project has students apply the knowledge and skills they have learned to make a first impression of a political candidate, evaluate that first impression by analyzing research consisting of non-fiction literature and videos, and write an analysis of the research and the character of the political candidate.


Profile Of Runaway Servant Women Based On Fugitive Notices In The Pennsylvania Gazette, 1729 - 1760, Kelsey Toms Jan 2014

Profile Of Runaway Servant Women Based On Fugitive Notices In The Pennsylvania Gazette, 1729 - 1760, Kelsey Toms

Undergraduate Student Research Awards

No abstract provided.


Pre-Raphaelite Painting And The Medieval Woman, Erin Frisch Apr 2013

Pre-Raphaelite Painting And The Medieval Woman, Erin Frisch

Art and Art History Honors Theses

No abstract provided.


Sleight Of Hand In The Alexandria Quartet: If The Right One Don't Get You, Frank Kersnowski Nov 2009

Sleight Of Hand In The Alexandria Quartet: If The Right One Don't Get You, Frank Kersnowski

Trickster's Way

No abstract provided.


What Is Poetry? [6th Grade], Kathleen Fenske Jul 2008

What Is Poetry? [6th Grade], Kathleen Fenske

Understanding by Design: Complete Collection

This unit focuses on the definition of poetry, its elements, and the types of poetry. The unit explores 4 essential questions: What is poetry? What is the difference between poetry and prose? How do you read a poem? What makes a poem great? Since poetry is an abstract term for most students, students will explore how poetry is different from prose. They will come to understand that it is written with a specific structure and that each aspect of a poem has a purpose. Students will read, analyze, and write poetry. They will begin the unit by responding to the …


“Purús Song”: Nationalization And Tribalization In Southwestern Amazonia, Peter Gow May 2006

“Purús Song”: Nationalization And Tribalization In Southwestern Amazonia, Peter Gow

Tipití: Journal of the Society for the Anthropology of Lowland South America

Starting from a statement about knowledge and power by a Piaroa informant of Joanna Overing, the article analyses two descriptions of a meal on the Purús river in the early twentieth century: a Piro song and a short essay by Euclides da Cunha. Contrasting these two pieces in the context of how the ancestors of the Piro people of today came to meet the famous Brazilian writer, I propose the concepts of “nationalization” and “tribalization” as modes of symbolic action. Nationalization takes local events and escalates them into the space-time of the nation state, while tribalization deactivates the dangerous ramifications …


Unearthing Revolution: The Awakening Of Man Unknown To Himself In Charles Brockden Brown's Edgar Huntly, Halvorson J. Nathaniel Apr 2006

Unearthing Revolution: The Awakening Of Man Unknown To Himself In Charles Brockden Brown's Edgar Huntly, Halvorson J. Nathaniel

English Honors Theses

No abstract provided.


Death As Metaphor, Lawrence Kimmel Jan 2004

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?


Durrell's Cockerel - Caesar's Vast Ghost, Frank Kersnowski Jul 2003

Durrell's Cockerel - Caesar's Vast Ghost, Frank Kersnowski

Trickster's Way

No abstract provided.


The Other: For Good And For Ill, Frank Kersnowski Jul 2002

The Other: For Good And For Ill, Frank Kersnowski

Trickster's Way

No abstract provided.


Odysseus And The Phaeacians, Corinne Ondine Pache Jan 1999

Odysseus And The Phaeacians, Corinne Ondine Pache

Classical Studies Faculty Research

Two unique events occur in Book 11 of the Odyssey as Odysseus tells the Phaeacians about his visit to Hades: first, Odysseus includes a story known as the "catalogue of women" that seems to have nothing to do with himself and his own adventures or with anybody else in the Odyssey; second, there is an interruption, known as the "intermezzo," in Odysseus' story, and a conversation takes place among Odysseus, Arete, and Alkinoos before the narrative is resumed. These two occurrences have much to say about the interaction between Odysseus and the Phaeacians, and also about the interaction between …


Islam Vs. Liberalism In Europe, Peter O'Brien Oct 1993

Islam Vs. Liberalism In Europe, Peter O'Brien

Political Science Faculty Research

In the West, Muslims are regarded with anxiety, mistrust, and fear. Many of us choose not to travel to Muslim countries for fear of becoming victims of terrorism. Most westerners worry about the Muslims' firm grip on the spigot of the world's oil reserves. And in 1991 we convinced ourselves that Saddam Hussein represented a threat on par with Hitler.1

But Muslims cannot really scare us. After all, it took but a few weeks to vanquish fully the "Butcher of Baghdad," who had up until that time the world's fourth largest army. We united in a stalwart international coalition …