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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
281

"The show is not the show": Rhetorics of seduction in the poetry of Emily Dickinson

Smith, Robert McClure 01 January 1992 (has links)
The premise of this study is that Dickinson's poetry is significant not in what it communicates to a reader, but in what it does to a reader. Dickinson famously defined her own response to poetry as an immediate sensual reaction. The continued popular and critical success of her poetry provides evidence of her capacity to elicit a similarly spontaneous, visceral response from her own readers. In order to trace the origins of this affective poetic, I examine Dickinson's rhetorical strategies in relation to the larger discourse of antebellum women. In particular, I argue that Dickinson's poetics can be considered a subtle re-emphasis of contradictions within a larger discursive formation, a specific rhetoric of seduction that permeated the antebellum culture within which she lived vicariously. The linguistic mechanism of Dickinson's own "rhetorical seduction" is examined through an analysis of her poems and letters considered not as communications but as rhetorical constructions designed to elicit a spontaneous reaction from a reader. The consequences of the rhetorical seduction Dickinson's poetry and letters effect is examined further through an analysis of the rhetorical slippages evident in a number of critical texts of recent years that have Dickinson's poetry as their focus. Throughout the study, the positions occupied by figural seducers and victims are considered interchangeable within a dialogic reading situation. Consequently, while the central focus is the "discourse of seduction" that is crucial to Dickinson's poetics, each individual chapter is also a specific critical application--new historicist, feminist, deconstructive, reader-response, psychoanalytic--to the poetry. In this way, the study is simultaneously a reflexive meditation on the attempted "seductions" of Dickinson's life and text by recent critical theory, not least by the particular critical narrative constructed in the course of my own reading.
282

A Guy Telling a Long Wild Tale: The Masculine Myth in Kerouac's "On the Road"

Collins, Paul Steven 01 January 1993 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
283

Mark Twain, Epistemologist: Philosophical and Literary Dimensions of a Skeptical Mind

Rohman, Chad January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
284

Toward a Poetics of Conscience: Contemporary U.S. Women Poets and Their Politics

Still, Gloria January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
285

The Letters of George Washington Cable: A Selected Edition

Eubanks, Sandra L. January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
286

A Journey Into The Heart of Man: Hemingway's Humanitarian Individualism

Mueller, Cheryl January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
287

To Be Done With Climbing In Trees

Marinac, Luke J. 11 April 2017 (has links)
No description available.
288

THE CREATION OF SPACE FOR ENGAGED READING AND CREATIVEINTERPRETATION IN THE COLLECTED WORKS OF WALLACE STEVENS

Cannavino, Lauren 30 November 2017 (has links)
No description available.
289

Dark And Bloody Ground: Southern Literature After the Bomb

Osborne, Virginia January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
290

The Gospels of Faith and Doubt: A Novel

Green, Charles 19 October 2010 (has links)
No description available.

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