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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
An Allegorical Reading Of Cormac Mccarthy's Outer Dark, Renee Williams
An Allegorical Reading Of Cormac Mccarthy's Outer Dark, Renee Williams
Undergraduate Research Conference
Though Cormac McCarthy deals with aspects of religion in each of his works, Outer Dark stands apart as a complete theodicy presented through complex allegory. Through his casting of the novel's characters as analogues for Christ, humanity, and Satan, McCarthy comments on the nature and consequences of the cosmic struggle between the forces of good and evil. McCarthy constructs his theodicy with the incorporation of Nietzschean philosophy and a deistic perspective.
What Is This Life?: Responses To Contingency In Chaucer's Pagan Romances, Luke Landtroop
What Is This Life?: Responses To Contingency In Chaucer's Pagan Romances, Luke Landtroop
Undergraduate Research Conference
In Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, the pilgrims’ host Harry Bailey invites the Monk to “quyte” or “repay” the Knight’s tale. Intrigued by various thematic and verbal connections between The Knight’s Taleand The Franklin’s Tale, and informed by critical opinions which identify the former as the “other” against which the remainder of the Canterbury Talesis arrayed, I set out to examine the ways in which The Franklin’s Tale “quytes” or responds to the issues raised in The Knight’s Tale. Not only are both tales chivalric romances set in the pagan past, but both also address the question …