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Full-Text Articles in American Studies

List Of Printers Sorted By Date - Full List, Don Armel Jul 2014

List Of Printers Sorted By Date - Full List, Don Armel

American Print History Data Spreadsheets

This checklist list is a continuing effort to collect all of the American printers into one location. The majority of the information is dates, place, name, and partners.


Images Of Library Holding Related To Early American Printing, Don Armel Jul 2014

Images Of Library Holding Related To Early American Printing, Don Armel

American Print History Data Spreadsheets

This spreadsheet is first organized by Library of Congress number and second by year.

The file includes links to the catalog reference at the Henderson Library and also to the reference image in Digital Commons.


“For He Contained Within Him A Largenesss Of Spirit:” The Duality Of Billy’S Spirit, The Hope For Humanity In Cormac Mccarthy’S Border Trilogy, Jessica Y. Spearman Jan 2014

“For He Contained Within Him A Largenesss Of Spirit:” The Duality Of Billy’S Spirit, The Hope For Humanity In Cormac Mccarthy’S Border Trilogy, Jessica Y. Spearman

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

This paper focuses on the contradictory merging of the differentiating forces that drive the natural world and the people in McCarthy’s Border Trilogy, with the most prominent being Billy’s persistent naïve view of the world as he grows from a boy to a man on his journey. The Border Trilogy chronicles the coming of age journey of John Grady Cole and Billy Parham. The second installment, The Crossing, focuses on the various dichotomies that construct the natural world—all of which are mirrored in Billy’s relationships with the mystical she-wolf, his brother, Boyd, the various people that he meets on his …


Folklore For A New Generation: Charles Chesnutt's Updated Trickster Figure, Peter Mccollum Jan 2014

Folklore For A New Generation: Charles Chesnutt's Updated Trickster Figure, Peter Mccollum

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Amidst a surge of plantation fiction writing during the era of American Realism, Charles Chesnutt was arguably one of the most controversial yet prolific authors to address the recent advent of slavery. The Conjure Woman was a publication of seven frame narratives that employed the traditional style of a former slave telling tales of “the old days,” and though Chesnutt's work may have mirrored such authors as Thomas Nelson Page, the tales broke from tradition with surprisingly stark accounts that are clearly based on Chesnutt's own conversations with former slaves. Much like another contemporary, Joel Chandler Harris, Chesnutt looks backward …