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Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Delarivier Manley's Possible Children By John Tilly, Rachel Carnell Dec 2007

Delarivier Manley's Possible Children By John Tilly, Rachel Carnell

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Review Of Milton In Popular Culture By Laura Lunger Knoppers And Gregory M Colón, Brooke Conti Jan 2007

Review Of Milton In Popular Culture By Laura Lunger Knoppers And Gregory M Colón, Brooke Conti

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


The Devotions: Popular And Critical Reception, Brooke Conti Jan 2007

The Devotions: Popular And Critical Reception, Brooke Conti

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales And Rescue In Sandra Cisneros's The House On Mango Street, Christina Marie Frank Jan 2007

Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales And Rescue In Sandra Cisneros's The House On Mango Street, Christina Marie Frank

ETD Archive

Within The House on Mango Street, Cisneros weaves several subtle literary allusions, mostly from fairy tales, into many of her vignettes. These subtle allusions help Cisneros create a portrait of expected feminine roles, mostly women as victims, within the patriarchal community, which, when juxtaposed with Esperanza's ideals for herself and her inner strength and drive, help distinguish her as different from those around her. Because she is different and stronger than the other women in her community, Esperanza will be able to reject the other female role models presented by both the women in her community and the women in …


Candida: Shaw's Presentation Of The Roman Catholic "Other", Kenneth Rademaker Jan 2007

Candida: Shaw's Presentation Of The Roman Catholic "Other", Kenneth Rademaker

ETD Archive

In 1876, George Bernard Shaw arrived in London, in many ways just another of the Irish immigrants who were coming to England in the wake of famine. Shaw had not in mind just making a living he wanted to be the literary giant he would indeed become. Of Anglo-Irish descent at a time when little distinction was made between the Anglo and Celtic Irish, Shaw felt it necessary to distinguish himself from the latter sort of immigrants, whose Roman Catholicism was a cause for alarm in a Britain that had been Protestant for three centuries. Shaw would do so with …


Ellison's Rinehart And Count Basie's: Invisible Man And 'Harvard Blues', Brooke Conti Jan 2007

Ellison's Rinehart And Count Basie's: Invisible Man And 'Harvard Blues', Brooke Conti

English Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.