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English Language and Literature Commons™
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Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in English Language and Literature
The Hero's Journey Beyond The Physical, Jasmine Jones
The Hero's Journey Beyond The Physical, Jasmine Jones
Symposium of Student Scholars
How would one go about integrating a theme of acceptance of self and others into an adventure, comedy, fantasy, and family friendly film? In the film Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, the invisible hand of the screenwriters does just that. The importance of this story is in the story structure. The four main characters are used to exemplify how there is an important relationship between plot and structure. Through this, character transformation takes place both physically and emotionally. The characters are presented as four normal people who were sucked into a game and sent on a quest to solve mysteries …
Implementing A Deliberate Neologism About The Filipino-American Identity Crisis, Gabrielle Sarah Punzalan, Rochelle Harris Cox Dr., Angela Brill
Implementing A Deliberate Neologism About The Filipino-American Identity Crisis, Gabrielle Sarah Punzalan, Rochelle Harris Cox Dr., Angela Brill
Symposium of Student Scholars
Neologisms are words that have recently entered our language but are only just beginning to be accepted as part of daily usage. As the English language evolves, new neologisms are formed while the usage of certain words may fade into relative obscurity. New words are coined to reflect the changing moods and cultural needs of the time. When it comes to critical race theory, neologisms can be used as a method of spreading awareness and addressing a problem. The Filipino American community is a marginalized group that experiences identity disturbance from the duality of both their nationality and ethnicity. Furthermore, …
Fruits Of Forced Desire: A Marxist Reading Of Christina Rossetti’S “Goblin Market”, James Greer
Fruits Of Forced Desire: A Marxist Reading Of Christina Rossetti’S “Goblin Market”, James Greer
Symposium of Student Scholars
Christina Rossetti’s 1859 poem, “Goblin Market,” is a tale of two maidens fearful of goblin merchants who canter about the glen selling an array of tempting fruits. Outside traditional feminist interpretations, the poem demonstrates the Marxist theory concerning commodification and reification. The maidens reveal the process in which human beings become commodities, solidifying Marx’s statement that: “the increasing value of the world of things proceed in direct proportion the devaluation of the world of men.”
Using specific aesthetic features common in the works of art during the Pre-Raphaelite movement, the poem further underscores the overall effects of laborer alienation and …
Consumptive Disease: Beauty To Die For, Audrina Rucker
Consumptive Disease: Beauty To Die For, Audrina Rucker
Emerging Writers
This article explores the intersection of the disease consumption with the rise of Romanticism and argues that the era influenced perceptions of the disease, particular in promoting its symptoms as an aesthetic of ideal beauty.
Introduction And Acknowledgments
Introduction And Acknowledgments
Emerging Writers
An introduction to the current issue.